The Dialectics of Faith in the Poetry of José Bergamín
Abstract
This study assesses Bergamín’s poetry in the light of two premises: first, that the notion of faith is the prime mover in Bergamín’s thought and poetry, and, second, that language, being material, militates against the transcendent potential of faith. From the tension between the known (the material) and the unknown (the transcendent) comes the dialectic of faith and doubt which Bergamín enacts in his poetry. Inspired by the work of Cixous and Kristeva, this analysis attempts to site Bergamín’s imagination as an exilic one, as one which is estranged from God. For Bergamín, language has created objectification from the material world, and thus he suggests that we perceive ourselves as separate from others and separate from God. His poetry is concerned with the radical instability of modern experience, and Bergamín seeks to use it as a form of reconciliation. He strives for a faith in the feminine, espousing doubt, fluidity and fusion as against certainty and the dictates of reason. For him, this faith, or reconciliation, is the opposite of exile.
Keywords
José Bergamín; faith; feminine; exileDOI
10.59860/td.b6aa5caISBN
9781839546808, 9781839546808, 0901286583Publisher
Modern Humanities Research AssociationPublication date and place
Cambridge, 1995Imprint
Texts and TranslationsSeries
MHRA Texts and Dissertations, 42Classification
Literary studies: poetry and poets
Spain
20th century, c 1900 to c 1999


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