Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Piranesi
View through CrossRef
<p><b>Susanna Clarke’s novel Piranesi (2020) is an award-winning fantasy novel, whose central theme is that a true understanding of Self can only be acquired once we remove ourselves from the artificial engagements of society and re-engage with the natural systems that define our world. In Clarke’s novel, the central character Piranesi –– by being completely isolated from society and the outside world –– has over time arrived at a serene and true understanding of Self.</b></p>
<p>He is imprisoned in a labyrinthian world, and to prevent himself from becoming lost (both physically and emotionally), he references and remembers the patterns of the environmental systems.</p>
<p>Clarke bases her fictional realm on the writings of selected philosophers and theorists, such as Rudolf Steiner and Colin Wilson, who share her views.</p>
<p>She openly informs the reader about these sources by listing them in the index of the main character’s journals (Clarke, 104). The world Clarke describes is based on Rudolf Steiner’s early twentieth-century vision of anthroposophy, a spiritual realm that is nevertheless accessible to human experience, where truth can be discovered with the same degree of clarity as scientists who make discoveries in the physical world. The principal character, Piranesi, represents ‘The Outsider’ from literary theorist Colin Wilson’s 1956 book The Outsider, which proposes that greater insight into the Self can only be acquired when we dislocate ourselves from society.</p>
<p>The second principal character in Clarke’s novel, whom she refers to as ‘the Other’, resides within society in the outside world, entering the labyrinth only for brief and infrequent visits. The Other represents a corrupt view of the search for understanding of Self. He does not understand how to move through the labyrinth, and he believes that it contains a hidden treasure, a commodity to be exploited. The Other is portrayed as engaging in a hopeless quest, while Piranesi has succeeded in finding serenity within himself. In this way, Clarke places the two principal characters into a didactic and dialectic narrative about the search for Self.</p>
<p>Clarke’s allegorical novel’s architectural setting is represented as a labyrinth, referencing Italian architect Giovanni Battista Piranesi’s 1750 edition of Carceri d’Invenzione etching’s of prisons. The labyrinthine world consists of three domains sited above and below one another: the domain of the clouds (above), the domain of man and the birds, and the domain of the tides (below). Between and within these domains exist thresholds – liminal zones – spaces that are in a constant state of flux, belonging to neither one domain nor the other. Throughout the labyrinth are mnemonic devices, such as carved statues, nesting birds and architectural fragments, that Piranesi uses to remember his pathway through the labyrinth and back again. In this way, Clarke represents the ideal outcome of the search for Self as a reconnection with the natural systems, using the literary devices of allegory, the labyrinth, liminality, and mnemonics to convey her central theme.</p>
Title: Piranesi
Description:
<p><b>Susanna Clarke’s novel Piranesi (2020) is an award-winning fantasy novel, whose central theme is that a true understanding of Self can only be acquired once we remove ourselves from the artificial engagements of society and re-engage with the natural systems that define our world.
In Clarke’s novel, the central character Piranesi –– by being completely isolated from society and the outside world –– has over time arrived at a serene and true understanding of Self.
</b></p>
<p>He is imprisoned in a labyrinthian world, and to prevent himself from becoming lost (both physically and emotionally), he references and remembers the patterns of the environmental systems.
</p>
<p>Clarke bases her fictional realm on the writings of selected philosophers and theorists, such as Rudolf Steiner and Colin Wilson, who share her views.
</p>
<p>She openly informs the reader about these sources by listing them in the index of the main character’s journals (Clarke, 104).
The world Clarke describes is based on Rudolf Steiner’s early twentieth-century vision of anthroposophy, a spiritual realm that is nevertheless accessible to human experience, where truth can be discovered with the same degree of clarity as scientists who make discoveries in the physical world.
The principal character, Piranesi, represents ‘The Outsider’ from literary theorist Colin Wilson’s 1956 book The Outsider, which proposes that greater insight into the Self can only be acquired when we dislocate ourselves from society.
</p>
<p>The second principal character in Clarke’s novel, whom she refers to as ‘the Other’, resides within society in the outside world, entering the labyrinth only for brief and infrequent visits.
The Other represents a corrupt view of the search for understanding of Self.
He does not understand how to move through the labyrinth, and he believes that it contains a hidden treasure, a commodity to be exploited.
The Other is portrayed as engaging in a hopeless quest, while Piranesi has succeeded in finding serenity within himself.
In this way, Clarke places the two principal characters into a didactic and dialectic narrative about the search for Self.
</p>
<p>Clarke’s allegorical novel’s architectural setting is represented as a labyrinth, referencing Italian architect Giovanni Battista Piranesi’s 1750 edition of Carceri d’Invenzione etching’s of prisons.
The labyrinthine world consists of three domains sited above and below one another: the domain of the clouds (above), the domain of man and the birds, and the domain of the tides (below).
Between and within these domains exist thresholds – liminal zones – spaces that are in a constant state of flux, belonging to neither one domain nor the other.
Throughout the labyrinth are mnemonic devices, such as carved statues, nesting birds and architectural fragments, that Piranesi uses to remember his pathway through the labyrinth and back again.
In this way, Clarke represents the ideal outcome of the search for Self as a reconnection with the natural systems, using the literary devices of allegory, the labyrinth, liminality, and mnemonics to convey her central theme.
</p>.
Related Results
Sublime Visions: Piranesi and his Carceri Prints
Sublime Visions: Piranesi and his Carceri Prints
This paper examines the philosophical concept of the sublime and its impact in the work of the artist Giovanni Battista Piranesi. The main focus of the paper is Piranesi’s Carceri ...
The Influence of Giovanni Piranesi’s Etchings on the Works of Mstislav Dobuzhinsky
The Influence of Giovanni Piranesi’s Etchings on the Works of Mstislav Dobuzhinsky
The relevance of the article’s topic is determined by the fact that the etchings of Giovanni Battista Piranesi, one of Mstislav Valerianovich Dobuzhinsky’s favorite artists, have n...
G. B. Piranesi and the Brutalism of The Brutalist
G. B. Piranesi and the Brutalism of The Brutalist
I discuss here the thoughts and theories connecting G. B. Piranesi, the Venetian eighteenth century inventor of impossible architectural forms like his famous Carceri, the rough st...
Ruínas, monumentos e patrimônio: relações entre Giovanni Battista Piranesi e Hubert Robert no século XVIII
Ruínas, monumentos e patrimônio: relações entre Giovanni Battista Piranesi e Hubert Robert no século XVIII
O presente trabalho procura analisar possíveis relações entre as obras do gravurista italiano Giovanni Battista Piranesi (1720-1778) e do pintor francês Hubert Robert (1733-1808) e...
Analysis of Red Chalk Drawings from the Workshop of Giovanni Battista Piranesi using Fiber Optics Reflectance Spectroscopy
Analysis of Red Chalk Drawings from the Workshop of Giovanni Battista Piranesi using Fiber Optics Reflectance Spectroscopy
Abstract
The viability of fiber optics reflectance spectroscopy (FORS) for the differentiation of red chalk drawing media was investigated, focusing on the group of drawing...
Palladio y Piranesi ante las ruinas
Palladio y Piranesi ante las ruinas
<p>“Tanto Palladio como Piranesi se enfrentan con la herencia romana de las ruinas para extraer enseñanzas que afectan a la propia disciplina arquitectónica. Una disciplina q...
Lo siniestro amenaza a todo lo viviente en las Carceri d’ivenzioni (1745-1760) de Giovanni Battista Piranesi
Lo siniestro amenaza a todo lo viviente en las Carceri d’ivenzioni (1745-1760) de Giovanni Battista Piranesi
El espacio representado en los grabados Carceri d’ivenzioni (1745-1760) de Giovanni Battista Piranesi parece envolver y disolver a la figura humana. Plantea un hábitat hostil hacia...


