The Slumber of Apollo: Reflections on Recent Art, Literature, Language and the Individual Consciousness

Hardback

Main Details

Title The Slumber of Apollo: Reflections on Recent Art, Literature, Language and the Individual Consciousness
Authors and Contributors      By (author) John Holloway
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:176
Dimensions(mm): Height 223,Width 148
Category/GenreLiterary studies - general
ISBN/Barcode 9780521248044
ClassificationsDewey:128
Audience
Professional & Vocational

Publishing Details

Publisher Cambridge University Press
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publication Date 1 December 1983
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

In this challenging new book John Holloway explores one of the most significant aspects of contemporary culture, arguing that over the last hundred years or so there has been a radical change in the very nature of individual consciousness. He traces a crucial shift from an 'Apollonian' ideal of human involvement in the widest range of experience (implying a sense of the individual consciousness as spacious, orderly, and comprehensive) to a narrower and less integrated engagement with the world (and a more reductive conception of consciousness as random and fragmented). He plots this shift through a number a quite different fields: there are chapters on the visual arts, on colloquial language and slang, on cartoons, on political rhetoric, and on 'personality' studies by psychologists. He goes on to examine the work of certain literary figures (notably Hardy, Edwin Muir, Wyndham Lewis, Patrick White, John Cowper Powys, and Gary Snyder) who seem to have recognized, and registered in imaginative terms, the pervasive but generally unrecorded changes in consciousness for which the book is arguing.