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Beyond the Capitals of Decadence

Type: Virtual

Description

Beyond the Capitals of Decadence Since antiquity, the elusive concept of ‘decadence’—regardless whether defined as a socio-cultural phenomenon, an artistic movement, or as an aesthetic programme—has been associated with the city. Especially during the fin de siècle, “decadent writers adopted a range of sensibilities that facilitated their simultaneous participation in, and resistance to, urban modernity” (Michael Shaw). The vast body of academic literature on the topic, such as the insightful work of David Weir and Jane H. Desmarais, Stefano Evangelista, Kristin Mahoney focuses on the urban sensibilities of writers and artists working in and inspired by the capitals of decadence (ancient Rome, Paris, London, Vienna or Berlin). Decadent art originating from outside these cultural centres remains, however, surprisingly understudied. In recent years there has been a considerable effort to expand our understanding of decadence in different directions. Following Matthew Potolsky, we understand the decadent movement as a distinctly transnational and cosmopolitan “republic of letters” that cannot and should not be seen as limited to a few Central European metropoles. For this seminar, we therefore invite papers that help to expand and redraw the canonical map of decadent literature and art, both in geographical as well as in cultural terms. We are equally looking for contribution that put the neglected “provincial” flâneurs and “small town” dandies of allegedly peripheral cultural centres such as Marseille, Dublin, Weimar, Lisbon, Oslo, Belgrade or Tbilisi as well as the urban decadents engaging with non-European cities such as Shanghai, Buenos Aires, Beirut or Tokyo. We are also keen to see proposals that expand ideas of decadence beyond the fin de siècle, reaching back into antiquity, and forward to today. We welcome proposals addressing a broad range of topics addressing decadence as a phenomenon reaching beyond its Central-European metropolitan origins. Possible topics may include but are not limited to: transnational and transcultural trajectories of decadent aesthetics and ethics city and culture specific representations of key concepts such as decay, artificial beauty, excess, eccentricity etc. city and culture specific manifestations and representations of the dandy and the flâneur the legacy of fin de siècle decadence in transnational, transcultural and transhistorical contexts the subversive potentials of decadent aesthetics and politics non-European spiritualities and decadent poetics the social, cultural and artistic dialectic of ‘the center’ and ‘the margins’ in decadent contexts For further inquiries please contact: Florian Zappe ([email protected]) and James Dowthwaite ([email protected]).  

Schedule

Friday, May 30, 2025
10:30 AM CDT - 12:15 PM CDT
Room: 2025 Annual Meeting > Conference Rooms

Papers

Decadent Infrastructure
Matthew Potolsky
The Decadent Gaze: The Cinematic Poetics of Tanizaki Jun’ichirō’s Early Short Fiction
Florian Zappe
Decadence in Dialogue: The Tokyo Flâneur, Viennese Modernity, and Transcultural Flânerie
Davide Gnoato
From Paysage to Pornotheology: Jaan Oks across the Limits of Rural Decadence
Ian Gwin
Art for Anti-Imperialism’s Sake: Sarojini Naidu's Decadent Impressionistic Lies in The Golden Threshold
Cherrie Kwok
Saturday, May 31, 2025
10:30 AM CDT - 12:15 PM CDT
Room: 2025 Annual Meeting > Conference Rooms

Papers

Ruined Splendor and Urban Imaginary: Korean Travelers in Colonial Cities
Aliju Kim
Beyond Dichotomies: Reframing Decadence in Early Modern Chinese Revolutionary Aesthetics
Yijie Zhang
Decadence and Early Twentieth-Century West Indian Print Culture
Robert Stilling
What Book Does This Picture NOT Represent? Decadence, Dada, and the Drawings of Clara Tice
Emily Singeisen
Sunday, June 1, 2025
10:30 AM CDT - 12:15 PM CDT
Room: 2025 Annual Meeting > Conference Rooms

Papers

Decadence and Austerity between the Alster and the Elbe: Stephen Spender’s Hamburg
James Dowthwaite
Decadence and Bath: Splendid Villas and Baneful Vice
Roslyn Joy Irving
Decadence in Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s Transnational Urban Experiences
Benjamin Heal
Shelley, Swinburne and Decadence in Late 19th-Century Bengali Poetics
Abhishek Sarkar