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dc.contributor.authorFrendo, Maria-
dc.date.accessioned2021-04-05T09:11:22Z-
dc.date.available2021-04-05T09:11:22Z-
dc.date.issued2015-
dc.identifier.citationFrendo, M. (2015). Bored to death: improvisations on a theme. Counter Text, 1(3), 304-331.en_GB
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/72885-
dc.description.abstractSince Petronius and Ovid wrote about the Sybil lamenting the loss of her freedom, which she had traded for eternal life, boredom has not ceased to fascinate and allure. Plato and Aristotle broached the topic philosophically, followed by a whole range of philosophers, writers, painters, and musicians. In this paper, Maria Frendo traces a genealogy of a host of characters in fiction and literary tradition who are afflicted by boredom, from Petronius’ Sybil to Beckett’s Vladimir and Estragon, from Shakespeare’s Antonio to Tennyson’s Lotos-Eaters, from Huysmans’ Count des Esseintes to Eliot’s Prufrock, but not forgetting woman: signally, through Flaubert’s Emma Bovary. The essay’s development and focus bears on two further considerations: firstly, the relation of boredom with death and desire, whereby the longing for relief from the situation in which one is trapped is accompanied by disinclination to resist and an accommodation to paralysis; and, secondly, patterns of duality and doubling across a good number of the predicaments depicted. Halfway through, the paper formally performs a boredom and irritation of its own in the process of highlighting existential angst and postmodernist neurosis in literature and the post-literary, and shifts its focus onto the poetry of Baudelaire and Mallarmé. This apparent randomness is deliberate: hence the subtitle ‘Improvisations on a Theme’, suggestive of thematic and structural characteristics to the paper and its argument.en_GB
dc.language.isoenen_GB
dc.publisherEdinburgh University Pressen_GB
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccessen_GB
dc.subjectBoredom -- Case studiesen_GB
dc.subjectModernism (Aesthetics)en_GB
dc.subjectSymbolism -- Franceen_GB
dc.subjectEliot, T. S. (Thomas Stearns), 1888-1965en_GB
dc.subjectMusicen_GB
dc.subjectImprovisation (Music)en_GB
dc.titleBored to death : improvisations on a themeen_GB
dc.typearticleen_GB
dc.rights.holderThe copyright of this work belongs to the author(s)/publisher. The rights of this work are as defined by the appropriate Copyright Legislation or as modified by any successive legislation. Users may access this work and can make use of the information contained in accordance with the Copyright Legislation provided that the author must be properly acknowledged. Further distribution or reproduction in any format is prohibited without the prior permission of the copyright holderen_GB
dc.description.reviewedpeer-revieweden_GB
dc.identifier.doi10.3366/count.2015.0025-
dc.publication.titleCounter Texten_GB
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