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논문 기본 정보

자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
이윤섭 (안양대)
저널정보
한국동서비교문학학회 동서비교문학저널 동서비교문학저널 제30호
발행연도
2014.6
수록면
185 - 210 (26page)

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초록· 키워드

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T. E. Hulme’s influence upon Korean Modernism has been enormous, since Choi Jaeseo and Kim Kirim introduced his innovative poetic theory and emphasized its anti-romanticism and “intellectualism.” It has been widely recognized by most Anglo-American scholars that Hulme preferred aesthetic intuition to rationalistic intellect under the influence of Bergson and his Romantic heritage derived mainly from Coleridge’s imagination theory with an emphasis on organistic unity. However, there have not been any significant developments or revisions in the understandings amongst the research of Korean Modernism towards his poetics. As well as Korean Modernism, it has been considered and discussed entirely in terms of anti-romanticism and its adjunct concepts.
This paper argues that Hulme’s poetics preserve some essential features of Romantic criticism, having recourse to Bergson’s “intuition” which he adopted for grasping the inner and hidden reality of intensive manifolds behind the external and phenomenal world of extensive manifolds. And, it also argues that the Bergsonian idea of aesthetic intuition led Hulme to his emphatic explanation of the so-called classical fancy, which turned out to have a very similar function to Coleridge’s organic imagination, not to his mechanical fancy of associations and memories.
Some have argued that Hulme’s intellectual thoughts underwent substantial changes during his brief years as a literary critic from the initial stage of following Bergson’s philosophy, through the stage of political and religious conservatism, to the final stage of geometrical art and anti-humanism. Acknowledging the validity in this “dating” of his writings, I still contend that Hulme’s romantic heritage of organic fancy and Bergsonian intuition can be succinctly found in his “Bergson’s Theory of Art” and “The Philosophy of Intensive Manifolds,” and later “Romanticism and Classicism.” His ideas on intuition and organic fancy never did change, though his political and religious ideas were subject to drastic changes through the shifting stages of his intellectual maturation.

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