品味进化的新篇章:18世纪英国沙龙如何塑造社交文化

Elena Butoescu
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摘要

在18世纪的英国,“品味”一词是一种新的载体,用来辨别个人对礼貌世界和文学世界中几乎任何事物的微妙体验。这个词包含了心灵对美的反应,它在每一种类型的写作中都很流行。品味的概念获得了一个独特的维度,有效地将其从19世纪早期出现的美学概念中分离出来,美学是哲学研究的一个新领域。18世纪关于品味和美的论述和持续的争论集中在占主导地位的古典主义的普遍性原型,对比例的意识,和谐以及形式和对称的感觉,这些原则是由沙夫茨伯里伯爵,大卫休谟和约书亚雷诺兹等有品味的人特别阐述的,他们垄断了品味。然而,18世纪为另一种品味概念奠定了基础,这一概念将女性纳入了品味模式的理论化领域。本文旨在研究异域情调的范畴,更确切地说,是18世纪英国的时尚文学小圈子,通常由女作家主持,如蓝袜女作家伊丽莎白·蒙塔古、玛丽·德拉尼、凯瑟琳·麦考利和汉娜·莫尔,目的是将这种有效塑造当代文学品味的文学推广与19世纪预期审美判断的品味理论联系起来。此外,适应文学会议的新社会环境塑造了一种新的话语,这种话语虽然受到嘲笑,但却促进和振兴了休谟所说的“可交谈的世界”和塞缪尔·约翰逊所定义的“俱乐部”时代的对话。因此,本文将探讨在这种对话中使用的话语在多大程度上将女性的文学品味转变为一个公认的批评类别,并对文学声誉的形成做出了贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
New Chapters in the Evolution of Taste: How Eighteenth-Century English Salonnières Shaped the Culture of Sociability
Abstract In eighteenth-century Britain the term taste was a new vehicle for discerning subtle qualities of an individual mind’s experience of practically anything in the polite world and the world of letters. The term entailed the response of the mind to beauty, and it became popular in each and every genre of writing. The notion of taste acquired a distinctive dimension which effectively disentangles it from the notion of aesthetics emerging early in the nineteenth century as a new area of philosophical enquiry. The eighteenth-century discourses on and ongoing debates over taste and beauty focused on the dominant classicist prototypes of universality, awareness of proportion, harmony and the sense of form and symmetry, principles which were specifically articulated by such Men of Taste as the Earl of Shaftesbury, David Hume and Joshua Reynolds, who had a monopoly on taste. However, the eighteenth century laid the groundwork for an alternative notion of taste, which included women in the realm of theorizing in the taste mode. This article aims to look into the category of exotic taste, and more precisely into the fashionable literary coterie of eighteenth-century England, often presided by women writers such as the Bluestockings Elizabeth Montagu, Mary Delany, Catherine Macaulay, and Hannah More, with the purpose of connecting this type of literary promotion, which was effective in shaping contemporary literary taste, to the theories of taste that anticipated aesthetic judgment in the nineteenth century. Besides, the new social milieu accommodating literary meetings shaped a new discourse which, though ridiculed, facilitated and revitalized conversation in what Hume called “the conversable world” and Samuel Johnson defined as the “clubbable” age. Accordingly, the article will explore the extent to which the discourse employed in such conversations transformed women’s literary taste into an accepted critical category and contributed to the formation of literary reputations.
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