French Graduate Seminar
Tuesday February 21st (6th Week)
All Souls' College, Hovenden Room
5.15-6.30pm
Natalie
Pangburn (Lincoln College)
'Foudroiement: Wajdi Mouawad and the philosophy of Jan Patočka'
One of the most prolific and
well-received French-language playwrights of his generation, Lebanese Canadian
Wajdi Mouawad has authored twenty-three original plays, recently directed new
adaptations of Sophocles’ seven surviving plays, and served in a number of
high-profile positions in the French theatre, including his current position as
Artistic Director at the Théâtre national de la Colline. Although Mouawad’s
literary and dramatic sources have been the subject of numerous studies, one
influence that has, as of yet, gone largely unexplored is that of Czech
phenomenologist Jan Patočka. This paper argues that this is an important lacuna
in contemporary scholarship. It describes how Mouawad discovered the works
of Jan Patočka in 1991, the year his career began, and has frequently
referenced Patočka’s writings in his exegetical texts and interviews, as well
as in the plays themselves. This paper explores how Patočka’s ideas provided
Mouawad with a language and philosophical framework for his artistic project
and ambitions. It describes a number of Patočka’s key philosophical innovations
- ‘shakenness’, the three movements of human existence, metanoia and
solidarity - and demonstrates the deep impact of these ideas on Mouawad’s
dramatic work. It argues that these ideas are in fact the basis for the four
key philosophical and theatrical ambitions most frequently expressed by
Mouawad: metamorphosis; the recognition of the other;
responsibility; and ‘solidarity of the shaken’. The paper concludes
with a brief discussion of how, and to what degree, Mouawad achieves
his Patočkan philosophical and ethical ambitions.
Robert Pruett (St Cross College)
'Remy de Gourmont's Lilith: mythic structures
of sexual pessimism'
Remy
de Gourmont's work at the end of the 19th century (notably Sixtine, La culture
des idées, and Le livre des masques) cemented the author as both a practitioner
and analyst of Symbolism's aesthetic tactics of subjectivity and dream.
Regarded as the philosopher laureate of the movement, he sought to carry these
unfolding artistic concerns into the theoretical realms of idealism, the study
of cultural constructs, and, central to this paper, the unwieldy subject of
sexuality and its governing influences. The bulk of Gourmont's fiction
explores, in one form or another, the precariousness of love and sex in a
phenomenological world. Of particular note is Lilith (1891-2), a play which
restructures, re-purposes, and combines elements of lapsarian lore to the
effect of a lewd and parodistic origin myth of carnal desire and its flaws. I
argue that Gourmont's dramatization, however ironic, adeptly personifies the
forces which shape human sexual relations in a manner unique among his other
works. My discussion of the archetypes which he employs will focus primarily on
three main themes: Firstly, the struggle between patriarchal control and
chaotic 'inutilité' in the figures of Jehovah and Satan, secondly, the principle
of individuation in the figure of Adam, and thirdly, the question of ideal
sexuality as a 'lost inheritance' in the figures of Lilith and Eve.
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