On the aestheticist roots of the intellectual Left in the first half of the 20th century Cover Image

Barbarus (ja Semper) ning „modernim ahvisugu” XX sajandi esimese poole haritlasvasakpoolsuse estetistlikust aluspõhjast
On the aestheticist roots of the intellectual Left in the first half of the 20th century

Author(s): Aare Pilv
Subject(s): Cultural history, Aesthetics, Social history, Theory of Literature, Sociology of Literature
Published by: SA Kultuurileht
Keywords: literary studies; aestheticism; avant-garde; Barbarus; Semper; leftism;

Summary/Abstract: This article explores how the works and activities of close intellectual companions Johannes Barbarus and Johannes Semper reconcile their alignment with a decadent and aestheticist artistic stance with their leftist views (leading to collaboration with Soviet power and the writing of propagandistic poetry). The discussion begins with Barbarus’ poem “Journey” (Teekond), where the individualistic poet contrasts with the “modern apes”, representing progressivist and calculating bourgeois modernity. The article delves into the internal ambivalence expressed in Barbarus’ poetry, revealing simultaneous attraction and repulsion towards large revolutionary crowds; the poet likely perceives the masses primarily as a source of aesthetic sublimity akin to other natural elements. The use of Verhaeren’s name in this poem and elsewhere in the works of Barbarus and Semper is then examined. The second half of the article broadens the discussion, exploring the shared grounds of decadence/aestheticism and utopian avant-gardism – an aesthetic resistance to modern progressivist society that ultimately leads to ideological transformation through the actualization of utopia and the internal collapse of initial aspirations. Barbarus and Semper’s midcentury choices can also be seen as artists’ aesthetic decisions, the fulfilment (but also failure) of aesthetic aspirations originating from decadence. The article concludes with the suggestion that aestheticism rooted in the attitudes of decadence may still be a viable approach to overcome the miseries of modernity – not by merging into revolutionary utopianism, but by assuming the form of “dark ecology”.

  • Issue Year: LXVII/2024
  • Issue No: 1-2
  • Page Range: 144-157
  • Page Count: 14
  • Language: Estonian
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