Thesis

The poetic imagery and existential dilemma of Jean Cocteau

Creator
Rights statement
Awarding institution
  • University of Strathclyde
Date of award
  • 1979
Thesis identifier
  • T3559
Qualification Level
Qualification Name
Department, School or Faculty
Abstract
  • This thesis is in two parts. In the first I deal with the personal mythology of Cocteau which contributed in great measure to the poetic imagery in his works. After attempting to distinguish the "real" Cocteau from his legendary "persona" by briefly examining aspects of his life and the various influences which impinged upon his artistic development, I proceed to discuss the constituent elements of his personal mythology and try to show how they emerged gradually as a result of his personal and artistic experiences over a long period. In the second part of the thesis I systematically examine the illustrations of his poetic imagery and aesthetic theories in selected works from the literary spheres in which he was prolifically active. Examples are studied from his poetry, his novels, his plays and his works of artistic criticism, which he described as his poesie critique, and I try to demonstrate the inter-dependence of his works in the various media he employed. In this section I also devote a final chapter to his most characteristic works in the cinema, a medium in which he possibly achieves the climax of his artistic aims by the imaginative use of his oneiric imagery to realise, with great versatility, the corporeal expression of his poetry, while simultaneously broadening the artistic dimensions of the art of the film. In examining his works I attempt to demonstrate that his existential dilemma, which he referred to as his malaise perpetuel, involved him in incautiously and sometimes wilfully fostering a false image. Nevertheless, the resulting conflict within him stimulated his oneiric experiences without which he could not have accomplished his poetic mission, an exploration of the mystery he termed la nuit humaine, from which he emerged endowed with a very individualistic morality of freedom opposed entirely to the conventions of social morality.
Resource Type
DOI
EThOS ID
  • uk.bl.ethos.451781
Date Created
  • 1979
Former identifier
  • 75603

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