A Nietzschean Reading of Romanticism: Aesthetics of Loss (Case Study of the Novel Life is Elsewhere by Milan Kundera)

Document Type : Original Article

10.48308/kj.2024.233782.1205

Abstract

This paper is a critique of Romanticism as aesthetics of Loss. As a case study, this
paper addresses Life is Elsewhere by Milan Kundera. Nietzsche says that an abundant
life is a major cause of the tragic pain (strong pessimism), but a sense of Loss results
in Romantic aesthetics (week pessimism). A Romantic poet has been chosen as a
prophet who has access to a transcendent truth: a truth going far beyond ordinary
limits; he is a person who is immature because he used to live in ideal place (womb).
The Lyrical age, according to Kundera, is youth, and this novel is an epic of
immaturity. The lyric poetry is an ideal form for self-expression, a poetry that prays
emotions per se. Actions have been replaced by enthusiasm. In practice this means
that poetry retreated into the soul. The current study has already described the crisis of Romanticism as an excess of subjective interiority. A poet goes so far as to say Reality is reduced to the aesthetic object. An action is the conditioned domain, but passion aims at the unconditioned. Poetry is always separate from the reality. These inward explorations do not coincide with the external world. This article focuses on a young poet, Jaromil, who aimed at the unconditioned, yet his last attempt ended in failure, falling under the spell of metaphors. 

Keywords

Main Subjects


Schmitt, Carl (2014), Politische Romantik, Translated by Soheil Saffari, Tehran: Negah-e Moaser (In Persian)
Alexander, Maxim (2004), “German Romantics,” Translated by Abdollah Tavakkol, in Organon, Vol. 2, Tehran: Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance Press (In Persian)
Bawre, Morris (2004), “Romantic Imagination,” Translated by Farhid Shirazian, in Organon, Vol. 2, Tehran: Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance Press (In Persian)
Deleuze, Gilles (2011), Nietzsche and Philosophy, Translated by Leyla Kouchakmanesh, Tehran: Rokhdad-e Now (In Persian)
Rorty, Richard (2004), “Heidegger and Kundra and Dikens,” Translated by Yousef Abazari, in Organon, Vol. 1, Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance Press (In Persian)
Rousseau, Jean-Jacques (2022), Emile, Translated by Gholamhossein Zirakzadeh, Tehran: Nahid (In Persian)
Hauser, Arnold (1993), The Social History of Art, Translated by Amin Moayyed, Chapakhsh (In Persian)
Kundera, Milan (2017), The Joke, Translated by Forough Pouryavari, Illuminators and Women’s Studies (In Persian)
Kundera, Milan (2017), Life is Elsewhere, Translated by Pantea Mohajer Kangarlou, Tehran: Farhang-e Nashr-e Now
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von (2020), The Sorrows of Young Werther, Translated by Mahmoud Haddadi, Tehran: Mahi (In Persian)
Lukács, György (2004), “On Romantic Philosophy of Life,” Translated by Morad Farhadpour, in Organon, Vol. 2, Tehran: Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance Press (In Persian)
Nietzsche, Friedrich (1998), Die frohliche wissenschaft, Translated by Jamal AleAhmad & Saeed Kamran & Hamed Fouladvand, Tehran: Jami (In Persian)
Nietzsche, Friedrich (2001), Zur Genealogie der Moral, Translated by Daryoush Ashouri, Tehran: Agah (In Persian)
Nietzsche, Friedrich (2003), Götzendämmerung, Translated by Daryoush Ashouri, Tehran: Agah (In Persian)
Wordsworth, William (2004), “Parts of Lyrical Ballads,” Translated by Hossein Payandeh, in Organon (Vol. 2), Tehran: Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance Press (In Persian)
Ansell-pearson, Keith (1996), Nietzsche Contra Rousseau, New York: Cambridge University Press
 Baibridge, Simon (2005), “Napoleon and European Romanticism,” in: A Companion to European Romanticism, Edited by Michael Ferber, UK: Blackwell Publishing
Finkielkraut, Alain & Kundera, Milan (1999), “Milan Kundera Interview,” Critical Essays on Milan Kundera, edited by: Peter Petro, New York: G. K. Hall & Co
 Foucault (1998n), “Nietzsche, Genealogy, History,” Translated by Rubert Hurley and others, in: Aesthetics, Method, and Epistemology, Edited by James D. Faubion , the New Press
 Ivanova, Velichka (2010), “Literature in the ‘other’ Europe Before and After the Transition: The Work of Blaga Dimitrova and Milan Kundera,” Debatte: Journal of Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe, 18: 2, 205-221
 Pfeffer, Rose (1972), Nietzsche: Disciple of Dionysus, Lewisburg: Bucknell University Press
Stauffer, Andrew (2005), Anger, Revolution and Romanticism, USA: Cambridge University Press
 Strauss, Jonathan (2005), “The Poetry of Loss: Lamartine, Musset, and Nerval,” in: A Companion to European Romanticism, Edited by Michael Ferber, UK: Blackwell Publishing
Weiss, Jason & Kundera, Milan (1986), “An Interview with Milan Kundera,” New England Review and Bread Loaf Quarterly, 8(3): 405-410, Published by Middlebury College publications, Stable