ABSTRACT

This book substantiates two claims. First, the modern world was not simply produced by "objective" factors, rooted in geographical discoveries and scientific inventions, to be traced to economic, technological or political factors, but is the outcome of social, cultural and spiritual processes. Among such factors, beyond the Protestant ethic (Max Weber), the rise of the absolutist state and its disciplinary network (Michel Foucault), or court society (Norbert Elias), a prime role is played by theatre. The modern reality is deeply theatricalized. Second, a special access for studying this theatricalized world is offered by novels. The best classical novels not simply can be interpreted as describing a world "like" the theatre, but they capture and present a world that has become thoroughly transformed into a global theatre. The theatre effectively transformed the world, and classical novels effectively analyze this "theatricalized" reality – much better than the main instruments supposedly destined to study reality, philosophy and sociology. Thus, instead of using the technique of sociology to analyze novels, the book will treat novels as a "royal road" to analyze a theatricalized reality, in order to find our way back to a genuine and meaningful life.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

Novels and the Problem of Reality

part I|56 pages

The Triple Origins of the Modern Novel

chapter 1|31 pages

The Don Quixote Chronotope

Paradoxical Paradoxes, or the Games of Cervantes

chapter 2|9 pages

The Rabelais Chronotope

The Mysteries of Fairground Economics

chapter 3|14 pages

The English Chronotope

The Cruel Illusionism of Realism

part II|62 pages

Actors, Spectators and Critics in the Sublime Theatre of the Public Arena

chapter 4|27 pages

Sublime Confusion

The Aesthetics of Intensity as an Anti-Platonic Revolt

chapter 5|15 pages

Diderot, the Trickster–Outsider–Critic

The Actor as God in an Enlightened World

chapter 6|18 pages

Lessing, the Trickster–Outsider–Critic

The Birth of German Enlightenment Out of the Spirit of Theatre

part III|90 pages

The Goethe Chronotope

chapter 7|30 pages

Johann Wolfgang Goethe

Demonic Formation and Theatrical Re-Formation

chapter 8|18 pages

Wilhelm Meister as Goethe's Self-Overcoming

From Theatrical Mission to Walking

chapter 9|40 pages

Promethean Modernity in Faust

From Asserting Titanic Poiesis to Diagnosing Alchemic Technology

part IV|116 pages

Beneath and Beyond Romantic Enlightenment

chapter 10|32 pages

Enlightened Romantics

From German Titanism to French Satanism

chapter 11|42 pages

Charles Dickens

Retrieving the Reasons of the Heart

chapter 12|40 pages

Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky

Standing Up Again after the Demonic Splits of Reason

chapter |4 pages

Conclusion

Towards the Sacrificial Carnival