Abstract

A Transcendental Prude

Trilling, Lionel | June 11, 1930 issue

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The article discusses books and authors. Writer H.F. Amiel is in many ways, the most complete example of that malaise-called, variously, spleen and Weltschmerz; Yertherism, Faustism, Hamletism; epigonehood, the sick will-to which, some hundred years ago, the Western world fell prey. To describe that malaise here is neither possible nor necessary, for a great part-perhaps the most relevant part of the literature of these hundred years has been engaged in its description, from novelists M. Arnold and Alfred de Vigny to T.S. Eliot, from novelist Stendhal and I.S. Turgenev to E. Hemingway. And there is no space to guess at its social causes, which must include the whole history of the West.

See Also:

LITERATURE; NOVELISTS; AUTHORS; DE Vigny, Alfred; LITTERATEURS
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