Lecture by Françoise Meltzer (University of Chicago): "Baudelaire's Time"
![Lecture by Françoise Meltzer (University of Chicago):
"Baudelaire's Time"](/sites/dlcl/files/styles/hs_medium_scaled_360px/public/events/meltzer.jpg?itok=EEZNH58e)
252
Speaker(s): Françoise Meltzer (University of Chicago)
This lecture presents a close reading of
Baudelaire's "Harmonie du soir" to
examine how Georges Poulet, Paul de Man, and others view time and
forgetting in Baudelaire. Meltzer will consider as well
Benjamin's “Angel of History,” among
other texts on "modernity." The present, she
argues, does not exist for Baudelaire; the future is threatening
and the past inaccessible. This perspective makes for a double
vision of sorts-- the poet cannot see clearly because he
consistently confronts two temporal landscapes at once. Such
strobismus (or stereo vision) makes for a different poet from the
one so famously described by Benjamin. In Meltzer’s
reading, Baudelaire is not the writer who founds modernity; rather,
he records, but does not necessarily understand, the chaotic scenes
around him. It was left to Benjamin and others to "read
the photographic plates" that Baudelaire leaves
behind.
Françoise
Meltzer teaches at the University of Chicago, where she is the
Edward Carson Waller Distinguished Service Professor in the
Humanities and Chair of the Department of Comparative
Literature. She is also Professor in the Divinity School, in the
Philosophy of Religions, and a co-editor
of Critical Inquiry. Her
most recent book is Seeing Double: Baudelaire's
Modernity (2011).