Javascript must be enabled to continue!
On Borges’s B/baroque
View through CrossRef
Abstract
This article examines Jorge Luis Borges’s ingenious, largely dehistoricized interpretations and imitations of seventeenth-century writers typically called Baroque. It contends that the aesthetic, epistemological, and metaphysical values Borges assigns to works by Cervantes, Góngora, Quevedo, Gracián, Marino, Browne, Pascal, Leibniz, Angelus Silesius, and Spinoza depend largely on his conservative notions of how style and, specifically, metaphor should work. While writers from the historical Baroque often require readers to embrace hermeneutic difficulty, Borges, despite the ingenious difficulty of his own writings, refuses to countenance this stance. This refusal turns also on Borges’s distinction between writing he fervently praises as “classic” and writing he ambiguously blames as “baroque.” The former serves as the explicit model for his own invention; but the latter implicitly, agonistically, informs much of his thinking and writing as well. Borges’s unwillingness to distinguish the historical Baroque from a recurring, eternal baroque is understandable, given his philosophy of art and history; however, it ignores how periodization can have the heuristic and conceptual function of finding unity in multiplicity, a unity that includes divergent styles and ideologies.
Title: On Borges’s B/baroque
Description:
Abstract
This article examines Jorge Luis Borges’s ingenious, largely dehistoricized interpretations and imitations of seventeenth-century writers typically called Baroque.
It contends that the aesthetic, epistemological, and metaphysical values Borges assigns to works by Cervantes, Góngora, Quevedo, Gracián, Marino, Browne, Pascal, Leibniz, Angelus Silesius, and Spinoza depend largely on his conservative notions of how style and, specifically, metaphor should work.
While writers from the historical Baroque often require readers to embrace hermeneutic difficulty, Borges, despite the ingenious difficulty of his own writings, refuses to countenance this stance.
This refusal turns also on Borges’s distinction between writing he fervently praises as “classic” and writing he ambiguously blames as “baroque.
” The former serves as the explicit model for his own invention; but the latter implicitly, agonistically, informs much of his thinking and writing as well.
Borges’s unwillingness to distinguish the historical Baroque from a recurring, eternal baroque is understandable, given his philosophy of art and history; however, it ignores how periodization can have the heuristic and conceptual function of finding unity in multiplicity, a unity that includes divergent styles and ideologies.
Related Results
Jorge Luis Borges
Jorge Luis Borges
Argentine hombre de letras Jorge Luis Borges (b. 1899–d. 1986) is one of Latin America’s most influential literary voices. He spent his youth in Europe and started as a poet connec...
Borges y el tango, una revisión
Borges y el tango, una revisión
En Borges hay una la relación estrecha con el tango. Su visión de esta música se relaciona con las experiencias que tuvo en medio del auge y la difusión inicial de este género de l...
Baroque Tragedy
Baroque Tragedy
Tragedy is central to the Baroque because it explores the powers and limitations of sovereign will; because the changeable fortune and wretched suffering of its illustrious persons...
The Baroque and Philosophy
The Baroque and Philosophy
Although the concept “baroque” is less obviously applicable to philosophy than to the visual arts and music, early modern philosophy can be shown to have connections with baroque c...
«Alguien le dice al Tango»: Borges, tango y milonga
«Alguien le dice al Tango»: Borges, tango y milonga
Este artículo examina el vínculo entre la obra de Jorge Luis Borges (1899-1986) y dos géneros musicales desarrollados en el Río de la Plata desde fines del siglo XIX y comienzos de...
« Puissance baroque » dans les nouveaux médias. À propos de Prospero’s Books de Peter Greenaway
« Puissance baroque » dans les nouveaux médias. À propos de Prospero’s Books de Peter Greenaway
Dans une situation de crise historique, la culture baroque a développé une remarquable puissance esthétique, souvent instrumentalisée par des projets de ...
Ottoman Baroque
Ottoman Baroque
The Ottoman capital of Istanbul was transformed in the eighteenth century by the rise of a new building style that scholars have dubbed “Ottoman Baroque” in reference to its adapta...
Baroque Sexualities
Baroque Sexualities
In terms of sexuality, the Baroque period sees an evolution culminating in more clear-cut definitions and fixity: the establishment of two dimorphic sexes, which sustain physiologi...