Promethean Mnemotechnics: Memory, Forgetting, Episodic Future Thought and Nonviolent Revolution
Promethean Mnemotechnics: Memory, Forgetting, Episodic Future Thought and Nonviolent Revolution
Author(s): Simona BecconeSubject(s): Cultural history, Poetry, History of ideas, 19th Century, British Literature
Published by: Universitatea Babeş-Bolyai
Keywords: P.B. Shelley; Prometheus Unbound; Chronoception; Prophetic Poetry; Episodic Future Thinking; Memory and Forgetting; Memories of the Future;
Summary/Abstract: In his Prometheus Unbound, Shelley reinterprets the Promethean mythologeme historicistically and psychodynamically as a response to his time’s political and ideological crisis. The Titan is resemiotised as the central figure of a metapsychological drama, in which the dialectic between the protagonist and his different chronoceptions, represented in the text as characters, takes the form of a complex multivocal negotiation between different types of memory and forgetting, synchronicistic contemplations of the present and protensive anticipations towards the future. These elements converge into a powerful strategy of mental action, or Promethean mnemotechnics, through which the protagonist first releases himself from the captivity of the tyrant Jupiter and then becomes a pragmatic model, to be followed in the reader’s extratextual dimension.
Journal: Caietele Echinox
- Issue Year: 2023
- Issue No: 44
- Page Range: 79-96
- Page Count: 18
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF