William Beckford : the elusive orientalist

Fiche technique

Format : Broché
Nb de pages : 247 pages
Poids : 400 g
Dimensions : 16cm X 24cm
Date de parution :
ISBN : 978-0-7294-1188-2
EAN : 9780729411882

William Beckford

the elusive orientalist

de

chez Voltaire Foundation

Collection(s) : Oxford university studies in the Enlightenment

Paru le | Broché 247 pages

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Quatrième de couverture

The writer and aesthete William Beekford (1760-1844) was a fascinating embodiment of the sublime egotist. Because of his extravagance, fabulousness and enigmatic nature, biographers have alternately presented him as an object of fascination or dismissed him as an insolent and deceptive character. Laurent Châtel provides an innovative reassessment of Beekford by presenting 'elusiveness' as the defining motif for understanding both the writer and his work.

Laurent Châtel opens his analysis by exploring the author's fascination for the East, which informed several of his multi-layered works such as 'The long story', 'Suite des contes arabes' and Vathek. By reconnecting him with the eighteenth-century aesthetic of translation and reappropriation of the Arabian nights, Châtel shows how Beckford's Orientalism was key to his elusiveness, and presents him as a fabulist who supplemented existing tales with touches of wonder and horror. In further chapters Châtel explores his lack of recognition as a man of letters - whether desired or not. Through an analysis of the arguably limited reception of Beckford's works, in particular in France both during his lifetime and immediately after his death, we see how his deliberate elusiveness of style was constitutive of his identity.

'Laurent Châtel engages perceptively with the shifting borders of translation, revisioning, interpretation and imitation, in ways that illuminate continuing issues around Orientalist scholarship. This is an admirable, luxuriantly detailed and most rewarding study.'

Biographie

Marina Warner, author of Stranger magic : charmed states and the 'Arabian nights'

Laurent Châtel is Senior lecturer in English studies, University of Paris-Sorbonne. His research interests include British culture, literature and the visual arts in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. He has published extensively on Beekford, garden history and landscape theory, and is Academic Adviser to the Hestercombe Centre for Art and Landscape.