ABSTRACT

Casanova, Stendhal, Tolstoy: Adepts in Self-Portraiture, the final volume of Stefan Zweig's masterful Master Builders of the Spirit trilogy, discloses the smaller version of a writer's own ego. Unconscious though it is, no reality is as important to the writer as the reality of their own life. Giacomo Casanova, Stendhal (Marie-Henri Beyle), and Leo Tolstoy have different approaches to self-portraiture, but Zweig shows that together they symbolize three levels which represent successively ascending gradations of the same creative function.

Casanova is depicted as having a primitive gradation; he simply records deeds and happenings, without any attempt to appraise them or to study the deeper working of the self. Stendhal's self-portraiture is depicted as psychological; he observes himself and investigates his own feelings. Tolstoy has the highest level; he describes his own life, records what led him to his own actions, and focuses on self-reflection in a completely unexaggerated manner.

At first glance it might seem as if self-portraiture is an artist's easiest task. With no further trouble than a probing of memory and a description of the facts of life, "the truth" is revealed. The history of literature shows that ordinary autobiographers are no more than commonplace witnesses testifying to facts that chance has brought to their knowledge. A practiced artist is needed to discern the innermost happenings of the soul; few who have attempted autobiography have been successful in this difficult task. The present volume expounds the characteristics of these subjectively minded artists, and of autobiography as their typical method of personal expression.

part |15 pages

Introduction

part |101 pages

Casanova

chapter |8 pages

The Man and the Book

chapter |5 pages

Likeness of Casanova in Youth

chapter |8 pages

The Adventurers

chapter |9 pages

Training and Talents

chapter |16 pages

Philosophy of Superficiality

chapter |21 pages

Homo Eroticus

chapter |9 pages

Years in Obscurity

chapter |8 pages

Likeness of Casanova in Old Age

chapter |15 pages

Genius for Self-Portraiture

part |105 pages

Stendhal

chapter |8 pages

Love of Falsehood and Delight in Truth

chapter |5 pages

Likeness

chapter |31 pages

Film of His Life

chapter |16 pages

An Ego and the World

chapter |20 pages

The Artist

chapter |8 pages

De Voluptate Psychologica

chapter |12 pages

Self-Portraiture

chapter |3 pages

Modernity of Stendhal

part |149 pages

Tolstoy

chapter |5 pages

Prelude

chapter |7 pages

Likeness

chapter |18 pages

Vitality and Its Counterpart

chapter |19 pages

The Artist

chapter |13 pages

Self-Portraiture

chapter |10 pages

Crisis and Transformation

chapter |11 pages

The Artificial Christian

chapter |19 pages

Doctrine

chapter |16 pages

Struggle for Realization

chapter |14 pages

A Day in Tolstoy's Life

chapter |7 pages

Resolve and Transfiguration

chapter |6 pages

The Flight to God

chapter |2 pages

Envoy