'Salve, risuena mentira': Cosmic Hyperbole, Confession and Historical Consciousness in Ramon del Valle-Inclan's Sonata de invierno (1905)*

被引:0
|
作者
Cacoullos, Anna Torres [1 ]
机构
[1] Penn State Univ, University Pk, PA 16802 USA
关键词
Sonata de invierno; Ramon Maria del Valle-Inclan; confession; 'truth-giving lie'; historical consciousness; Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel; Jean-Jacques; Rousseau; St Augustine;
D O I
10.1080/14753820.2019.1613743
中图分类号
I3/7 [各国文学];
学科分类号
摘要
In Ramon del Valle-Inclan's Sonata de invierno (1905), a Prelate suggests to the Marques de Bradomin that he write a book about his life, with the warning, however, that St Augustine and Rousseau are two different models for Bradomin's life story. This article proposes to read Sonata de invierno as confession, as opposed to memoir or autobiography, where 'Valleinclanian' confession in the mode of what I term 'cosmic hyperbole'-lies, exaggeration and storytelling-engages with both the worldly and sinful dimension of St Augustine's and Rousseau's Confessions. Cosmic hyperbole achieves historical consciousness, leading to a deeper and swelling understanding of the history of a whole culture (Spain's) and informing the rapport between history and meaning. When one lifts the fool's cap, rejecting the idea that history is meaningless, and ignorance is bliss, one encounters truth and lying as bedfellows. For Bradomin, getting in touch with one's history involves taking the 'truth-giving lie' to gain an ever-creating life. Bradomin's closed immediate society, wholly sacralised, and a humane, desacralized Spain are engaged in a Hegelian contest to the death of one: for Valle-Inclan, I will argue, it is, hopefully, of the former.
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页码:975 / 991
页数:17
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