{"title":"与阿波罗做爱:在一次相当光荣的失败中,艾里斯·默多克的雅典恋人的无伽玛塔恋","authors":"Athanasios Dimakis","doi":"10.1353/sli.2018.0015","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This essay explores the theme of Apollonian love in Iris Murdoch’s A Fairly Honourable Defeat. It traces the morally laden scopic and solar milieu of the novel that informs the portrayals of Morgan Browne’s “rape”—instigated by the secular theophany of Apollo—and, most importantly, the trials of love, and the homosexual quasi-marital Apollonian union of Simon Foster and Axel Nillson. Simon and Axel’s sexual intercourse with the statue of a kouros,1 on display at the National Archaeological Museum in Athens, bears testimony to the continuous presence of Apollo in Murdoch’s fiction—made apparent in the admission in her Metaphysics as a Guide to Morals that she is a visualist still living “in a Greek light” (159). Having love as its thematic axis, this article focuses on the ways in which Murdoch’s fiction is informed by her theoretical work and permeated by the tenets of her visualist philosophy. It reflects on Murdoch’s philosophical and literary texts, highlighting the continuum and the uninterrupted flow of ideas between them. Selfless love is at the center of Murdoch’s idiosyncratic, quixotic conception of moral vision, as well as the philosophical idealism and spiritualism governing her ethically laden novels. Being two of Murdoch’s most daring passages, Simon’s and Axel’s strikingly unexplored paraphilia and ménage à trois with the kouros and Morgan’s erotic choreography of insolation allude to the impulses of low and high Eros. Murdoch consistently sublimates and elevates the unorthodox paraphilia of Apollo’s wooers through their transformative sexual intercourse with the most celebrated simulacrum of the solar deity of Apollo that illuminates their divine love. Being Apollo’s signifier, the reanimated kouros grants the ensuing illumination of his inamoratos in the novel’s finale, which palpitates with the triumph of their love. The novel is consistently discussed in light of philosophical works such as The Fire and the Sun: Why Plato Banished the Artists and Metaphysics that address Murdoch’s Hellenic visualist morality. Following Murdoch’s theorizing of virtuous love as an escape from the egocentric tenebrosity of","PeriodicalId":390916,"journal":{"name":"Studies in the Literary Imagination","volume":"35 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-06-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Making Love to Apollo: The Agalmatophilia of Iris Murdoch’s Athenian Lovers in A Fairly Honourable Defeat\",\"authors\":\"Athanasios Dimakis\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/sli.2018.0015\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"This essay explores the theme of Apollonian love in Iris Murdoch’s A Fairly Honourable Defeat. It traces the morally laden scopic and solar milieu of the novel that informs the portrayals of Morgan Browne’s “rape”—instigated by the secular theophany of Apollo—and, most importantly, the trials of love, and the homosexual quasi-marital Apollonian union of Simon Foster and Axel Nillson. Simon and Axel’s sexual intercourse with the statue of a kouros,1 on display at the National Archaeological Museum in Athens, bears testimony to the continuous presence of Apollo in Murdoch’s fiction—made apparent in the admission in her Metaphysics as a Guide to Morals that she is a visualist still living “in a Greek light” (159). Having love as its thematic axis, this article focuses on the ways in which Murdoch’s fiction is informed by her theoretical work and permeated by the tenets of her visualist philosophy. It reflects on Murdoch’s philosophical and literary texts, highlighting the continuum and the uninterrupted flow of ideas between them. Selfless love is at the center of Murdoch’s idiosyncratic, quixotic conception of moral vision, as well as the philosophical idealism and spiritualism governing her ethically laden novels. Being two of Murdoch’s most daring passages, Simon’s and Axel’s strikingly unexplored paraphilia and ménage à trois with the kouros and Morgan’s erotic choreography of insolation allude to the impulses of low and high Eros. Murdoch consistently sublimates and elevates the unorthodox paraphilia of Apollo’s wooers through their transformative sexual intercourse with the most celebrated simulacrum of the solar deity of Apollo that illuminates their divine love. Being Apollo’s signifier, the reanimated kouros grants the ensuing illumination of his inamoratos in the novel’s finale, which palpitates with the triumph of their love. The novel is consistently discussed in light of philosophical works such as The Fire and the Sun: Why Plato Banished the Artists and Metaphysics that address Murdoch’s Hellenic visualist morality. 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Making Love to Apollo: The Agalmatophilia of Iris Murdoch’s Athenian Lovers in A Fairly Honourable Defeat
This essay explores the theme of Apollonian love in Iris Murdoch’s A Fairly Honourable Defeat. It traces the morally laden scopic and solar milieu of the novel that informs the portrayals of Morgan Browne’s “rape”—instigated by the secular theophany of Apollo—and, most importantly, the trials of love, and the homosexual quasi-marital Apollonian union of Simon Foster and Axel Nillson. Simon and Axel’s sexual intercourse with the statue of a kouros,1 on display at the National Archaeological Museum in Athens, bears testimony to the continuous presence of Apollo in Murdoch’s fiction—made apparent in the admission in her Metaphysics as a Guide to Morals that she is a visualist still living “in a Greek light” (159). Having love as its thematic axis, this article focuses on the ways in which Murdoch’s fiction is informed by her theoretical work and permeated by the tenets of her visualist philosophy. It reflects on Murdoch’s philosophical and literary texts, highlighting the continuum and the uninterrupted flow of ideas between them. Selfless love is at the center of Murdoch’s idiosyncratic, quixotic conception of moral vision, as well as the philosophical idealism and spiritualism governing her ethically laden novels. Being two of Murdoch’s most daring passages, Simon’s and Axel’s strikingly unexplored paraphilia and ménage à trois with the kouros and Morgan’s erotic choreography of insolation allude to the impulses of low and high Eros. Murdoch consistently sublimates and elevates the unorthodox paraphilia of Apollo’s wooers through their transformative sexual intercourse with the most celebrated simulacrum of the solar deity of Apollo that illuminates their divine love. Being Apollo’s signifier, the reanimated kouros grants the ensuing illumination of his inamoratos in the novel’s finale, which palpitates with the triumph of their love. The novel is consistently discussed in light of philosophical works such as The Fire and the Sun: Why Plato Banished the Artists and Metaphysics that address Murdoch’s Hellenic visualist morality. Following Murdoch’s theorizing of virtuous love as an escape from the egocentric tenebrosity of