Your Cart ()
cload

GUARANTEED SAFE & SECURE CHECKOUT

Spend $x to Unlock Free Shipping to  

The Sign of the Swan: How French Symbolist Poetry Re-Envisions Reality - Paperback

$75.26
Checkout Secure
Only 3 left! .. people are viewing this, and 3 recently purchased it
Order in the next to get it by

Great reasons to buy from us:

  • Image of Changed your mind? Ordered the wrong thing? Simply return your item for a prompt exchange or refund.

    30-Day Money-Back Guarantee

    Changed your mind? Ordered the wrong thing? Simply return your item for a prompt exchange or refund.
  • Image of Enjoy free shipping when you spend over $70

    Free Shipping Over $70

    Enjoy free shipping when you spend over $70
  • Image of SSL Protected Checkout & Strongly Secure for Payments

    Secure Checkout

    SSL Protected Checkout & Strongly Secure for Payments
  • Image of Every order is a priority to us. We handle your order quickly to ensure you get your product fast.

    Fast Handling

    Every order is a priority to us. We handle your order quickly to ensure you get your product fast.

by William Franke (Author)

Offers a fresh interpretation of French Symbolist poetics, showing how Mallarmé, Baudelaire, and Rimbaud used visionary, transformative language to challenge modern secular perceptions of reality and reconfigure poetry as a kind of spiritual revelation.

Despite intensive scholarly activity around its various protagonists, there is surprisingly little comprehensive attempt at critical interpretation in English of the French symbolist movement and its far-reaching purport. Most contemporary works on the topic take the form of anthologies of poetry and theory. The turn to religion, moreover, in recent decades ("post-secular" times) has opened new perspectives developed especially by Bertrand Marchal and his satellites in France, but to date without much echo in the English-speaking world. The Sign of the Swan stands out as an ambitious attempt to interpret the profound spiritual revolution wrought by this poetry in a religiously visionary key rather than as simply consonant with the general secularizing trend of art in modern times.
Historically, symbolism rises to ascendency when a need to open up other channels of meaning besides those recognized by scientific positivism comes to be strongly felt at various stages of the industrial revolution. Thus, symbolist meaning defines itself against denotative, scientific, pragmatic meaning in language. And yet an indescribable, literal rootedness of language in physiological fact is acknowledged by Mallarmé as a disappearing source of poetic creation. This irrecoverable origin can be compensated for and reconstructed by the productions of fantasy. Paradoxically, Mallarmé's poetry exalts the "pure idea" and at the same time the concrete materiality of language. This book explains how this coincidence of opposites is possible.
The emptiness of language resulting from its merely representing an absent object, what we may term its objective emptiness, makes it open to every sort of subjective in-pouring of contents to fill it out. What is missing on the objective side constitutes an opportunity for investment on the subjective side. It is not surprising that the symbolists discovered one of their richest symbols in the "cygne"--which not only means "swan," but also homophonically says "sign" ("signe"). This word in French symbolist poetry, starting with Baudelaire and Mallarmé, intimates the transfiguration of the pure, blank linguistic sign, "white" like the swan, into an inexhaustible plethora of associations to be made by individuals and their subjective fantasies. The "symbol" thus becomes itself a source of perceptions, a verbal unity containing a universe.

Author Biography

William Franke is a philosopher of the humanities and a professor of comparative literature at Vanderbilt University. He is the author of over 20 books of speculative philosophy and literary criticism.

Number of Pages: 94
Dimensions: 0.23 x 9 x 6 IN
Publication Date: March 17, 2026
Shipping This item ships to
Delivery Estimated between and . Will usually ship within 1 business day.

Description

by William Franke (Author)

Offers a fresh interpretation of French Symbolist poetics, showing how Mallarmé, Baudelaire, and Rimbaud used visionary, transformative language to challenge modern secular perceptions of reality and reconfigure poetry as a kind of spiritual revelation.

Despite intensive scholarly activity around its various protagonists, there is surprisingly little comprehensive attempt at critical interpretation in English of the French symbolist movement and its far-reaching purport. Most contemporary works on the topic take the form of anthologies of poetry and theory. The turn to religion, moreover, in recent decades ("post-secular" times) has opened new perspectives developed especially by Bertrand Marchal and his satellites in France, but to date without much echo in the English-speaking world. The Sign of the Swan stands out as an ambitious attempt to interpret the profound spiritual revolution wrought by this poetry in a religiously visionary key rather than as simply consonant with the general secularizing trend of art in modern times.
Historically, symbolism rises to ascendency when a need to open up other channels of meaning besides those recognized by scientific positivism comes to be strongly felt at various stages of the industrial revolution. Thus, symbolist meaning defines itself against denotative, scientific, pragmatic meaning in language. And yet an indescribable, literal rootedness of language in physiological fact is acknowledged by Mallarmé as a disappearing source of poetic creation. This irrecoverable origin can be compensated for and reconstructed by the productions of fantasy. Paradoxically, Mallarmé's poetry exalts the "pure idea" and at the same time the concrete materiality of language. This book explains how this coincidence of opposites is possible.
The emptiness of language resulting from its merely representing an absent object, what we may term its objective emptiness, makes it open to every sort of subjective in-pouring of contents to fill it out. What is missing on the objective side constitutes an opportunity for investment on the subjective side. It is not surprising that the symbolists discovered one of their richest symbols in the "cygne"--which not only means "swan," but also homophonically says "sign" ("signe"). This word in French symbolist poetry, starting with Baudelaire and Mallarmé, intimates the transfiguration of the pure, blank linguistic sign, "white" like the swan, into an inexhaustible plethora of associations to be made by individuals and their subjective fantasies. The "symbol" thus becomes itself a source of perceptions, a verbal unity containing a universe.

Author Biography

William Franke is a philosopher of the humanities and a professor of comparative literature at Vanderbilt University. He is the author of over 20 books of speculative philosophy and literary criticism.

Number of Pages: 94
Dimensions: 0.23 x 9 x 6 IN
Publication Date: March 17, 2026

Shipping

Shipping This item ships to
Delivery Estimated between and . Will usually ship within 1 business day.

Reviews

The Sign of the Swan: How French Symbolist Poetry Re-Envisions Reality - Paperback

The Sign of the Swan: How French Symbolist Poetry Re-Envisions Reality - Paperback

$75.26
The Sign of the Swan: How French Symbolist Poetry Re-Envisions Reality - Paperback

The Sign of the Swan: How French Symbolist Poetry Re-Envisions Reality - Paperback

$75.26
3 visitors right now
3 visitors have this item in their cart right now
3 people have bought this item
3 % of people buy 2 or more

Recently viewed products