Cavafy the Byzantinist: The Poetics of Materiality

A. McClanan
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

For me, the Byzantine period is like a closet with many drawers. If I want something, I know where to find it, into which drawer to look. --Constantine Cavafy (qtd. in Sareyannis and Haas 113) Constantine Cavafy's poetry renders an "illustrious" Byzantine past as a new world, one both alien and familiar to us at the same time. (1) These poems that are tied to the places and people of the Byzantine world are made vivid and tangible through a remarkable set of poetic figurations. His Byzantium is a place brought to life through an exquisite materiality, and key poems such as "In the Church," "Waiting for the Barbarians," and "After the Swim" testify to the importance of this realm in his verse. (2) These poems, which span through his years as a mature artist, therefore serve as touchstones for thinking about how he anchors his poetic universe of Byzantium in the fabric of sensory perception. Materiality in Cavafy's work has received its most extensive exploration in Karen Emmerich's recent doctoral dissertation, which pursues the path of the materiality of the physical manuscript tradition, taking as its inspiration the "visual turn" in literary scholarship (256). (3) Emmerich's work demonstrates Cavafy's awareness of the importance of the physical traces of his work as a writer, corroborating what we will see emerge in the texts: an extraordinary sensitivity to the experience of the Byzantine places and objects he evokes. Cavafy's Byzantine poems conjure up a palpable reality as the essence of their exploration of that overlooked period (Mahaira-Odoni 16). The overt appeal to the senses in Byzantine liturgy and visual culture grounds his depiction. Through a close reading of these poems, we can interpret these themes that shape his depiction of a Hellenic past in general and the Byzantine Empire in particular. "In the Church" inscribes that layering of the past, namely the medieval Byzantine world, onto the experience of the present. It is such poems that have led to the recent characterization that "his faith was a matter less of belief than of pious observance" (Raphael 4). The opening exclamation shifts to an enumeration of the church fittings, rendered in Daniel Mendelsohn's translation as, I love the church--its labara, the silver of its vessels, its candelabra, the lights, its icons, its lectern. (1-3) [FIGURE 1 OMITTED] The discrete objects--not the building or the people of the church--absorb the watchful attention of the poem's speaker. This opening list lingers over the shimmering things; the enticing gleam of the metal defines the vessels (see Fig. 1). This quick inventory manages to capture a sense of initial observation, the unfolding perceptions on first stepping into the church. The suggestion that the shimmering quality of these things stands for the church might seem perversely superficial, but, on the contrary, Cavafy builds his Byzantine world from this transcendent materiality. His conjuration of the light-infused space of the Eastern Church rests also on centuries worth of Orthodox theology that interprets the material essence of these objects as intrinsic to their liturgical function. (4) While only relatively recently have scholars of Byzantine art history begun a more serious investigation of "new materiality" within the study of visual culture, Cavafy many decades ago displayed a prescient understanding of how Byzantine structures once were and continue to be experienced. The ecclesiastical space of "In the Church" is defined by its resplendent surfaces, by the sensory experience of actually being fully present in a place. Other poems such as "Apollonius of Tyana in Rhodes" and "Of Colored Glass" utilize similar strategies for imparting upon their objects a special status as bearers of meaning (Bowersock, "Cavafy" 188-89). "Of Colored Glass," for example, offers an "elegiac tribute" to the tribulations of the final centuries of Byzantium through this corporeity Geffreys, Eastern Questions 107). …
拜占庭主义者Cavafy:物质性的诗学
对我来说,拜占庭时期就像一个有很多抽屉的壁橱。如果我想要什么东西,我知道去哪里找,去哪个抽屉找。——康斯坦丁·卡瓦菲在萨雷扬尼斯和哈斯的诗中,康斯坦丁·卡瓦菲斯把“辉煌的”拜占庭过去描绘成一个新世界,一个我们既陌生又熟悉的新世界。(1)这些诗歌与拜占庭世界的地方和人民联系在一起,通过一系列非凡的诗歌形象,这些诗歌变得生动而有形。他的拜占庭是一个通过精致的物质性而被赋予生命的地方,像“在教堂里”,“等待野蛮人”和“游泳后”这样的关键诗歌在他的诗中证明了这个领域的重要性。(2)这些诗歌贯穿了他作为一个成熟艺术家的岁月,因此可以作为试金石,思考他是如何将他的拜占庭诗歌宇宙锚定在感官知觉的结构中。卡瓦菲斯作品中的物质性在卡伦·艾默里奇(Karen Emmerich)最近的博士论文中得到了最广泛的探索,该论文追求物理手稿传统的物质性,以文学研究中的“视觉转向”为灵感(256)。(3)艾默里奇的作品证明了卡瓦菲斯对他作为作家的作品的物理痕迹的重要性的认识,证实了我们将在文本中看到的东西:对他所唤起的拜占庭地方和物体的体验的非凡敏感性。卡瓦菲斯的拜占庭式诗歌唤起了一种显而易见的现实,作为他们对那个被忽视的时期的探索的本质(Mahaira-Odoni 16)。在拜占庭礼仪和视觉文化中对感官的公开呼吁是他描绘的基础。通过仔细阅读这些诗歌,我们可以解释这些主题,这些主题塑造了他对希腊过去的描述,特别是拜占庭帝国。《在教堂里》将过去的分层,即中世纪的拜占庭世界,铭刻在现在的体验上。正是这样的诗歌导致了最近的描述,“他的信仰与其说是信仰,不如说是虔诚的仪式”(拉斐尔4)。开头的感叹变成了对教堂设备的列举,在丹尼尔·门德尔松的翻译中,我爱教堂——它的拉巴拉,它的银器皿,它的大烛台,灯光,它的图标,它的讲台。(1-3)[图1省略]离散的物体——不是建筑或教堂里的人——吸引了诗的讲话者警惕的注意力。这张开头的清单在闪烁的事物上徘徊;金属的迷人光芒定义了容器(见图1)。这种快速的清单设法捕捉到一种最初的观察感,即第一次走进教堂时展开的感知。这些东西闪闪发光的品质代表着教会,这一说法似乎很肤浅,但恰恰相反,卡瓦菲斯从这种超然的物质性中构建了他的拜占庭世界。他对东方教堂充满光线的空间的召唤也基于几个世纪以来东正教神学的价值,该神学将这些物体的物质本质解释为其礼拜功能的内在。(4)拜占庭艺术史的学者们直到最近才开始对视觉文化研究中的“新物质性”进行更严肃的调查,而卡瓦菲早在几十年前就展示了对拜占庭建筑曾经是如何被体验和继续被体验的有先见之明的理解。“在教堂里”的教会空间是由其金光闪闪的表面,通过实际完全存在于一个地方的感官体验来定义的。其他诗歌,如“罗德岛提亚纳的阿波罗尼乌斯”和“彩色玻璃”使用类似的策略,赋予他们的对象作为意义承载者的特殊地位(鲍尔索克,“Cavafy”188-89)。例如,“Of Colored Glass”(彩色玻璃)通过这种集体,为拜占庭最后几个世纪的苦难提供了“哀歌般的致敬”(杰弗里,《东方问题》107)。…
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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