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Table of Contents
1. Introduction: Death as “the Most Poetical Topic of the World 4
2. The Contents of “The Oval Portrait 5
3. Art - Arabesque as a Clue to Deception and Irony 6
4. The “Life-likeliness of Art 7
5. Death in Life - The Rivalry between the Artwork and the Model 8
6. The Idea of Death in Life in the Framework 9
7. The Fatalism and the Problems of Translation 10
8. Conclusion: The Effect of Irritation 12
9. Bibliography 13
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1. Introduction: Death as “the Most Poetical Topic of the World”
In an quasi-autobiographical poem Edgar Allan Poe writes: “I could not love except where Death / Was mingling his with Beauty’s breath” 1 and expresses hereby what may be considered as his artistic credo: “the death, then, of a beautiful woman is, unquestionably, the most poetical topic of the world . . .” 2 Indeed, Poe insistently figures the death of beauty and vice versa the beauty of death in many of his works. His epoch can be considered as “ the Age of the Beautiful Death” 3 , a certain period of time in which dying is blown up into an elaborately prepared departure, into a fetishized spectacle. The dead body, particularly the one of a young unmarried woman, becomes an icon, an object of idolatry. This motif develops out of our fear of , and simultaneous fascination with, death. Representations of death in literature are peculiarly pleasing because in this case people can have a more distanced approach to the theme as “death occurs at someone else’s body and as an image.” 4
“The Oval Portrait” also deals with the death of a young woman. But her husband tends to see the icon not in her body, but in the portrait he has painted. His ambition to create a lifelike painting is at the end - paradoxically - the reason for his wife’s death. However, she refuses to stay dead. The confusing and paradoxical relationships between art, life and death constitute the thematic center of the story.
1 Cf. Kennedy, J. Gerald. Poe, Death, and the life of writing. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1987, 63
2 Poe, E. A. “The Philosophy of composition.” Poetry and Tales. Essays and Reviews. New York: The Library of America, 1984, 184
3 Kennedy, J. Gerald, op. cit. 64
4 Kot, Paula, Feminist „Re-Visioning“ of Tales of Woman, in: A Companion to Poe Studies, Ed. Eric W. Carlson , Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1996, 392
5
2. The Contents of “The Oval Portrait”
“The Oval Portrait begins as a story told by a man seeking shelter in the
Apennines. Having been wounded in some unidentified battle or duel, the narrator
lodges one night in an abandoned, gothic chateau, one such as found in “the fancy of
Mrs Radcliffe 5 Together with his valet, he seeks refuge in a small apartment situated
in a remote turret of the building where he is much taken by the paintings that adorn
the walls. By accidentally changing the position of the candelabrum and altering his
perspective, he sees the oval portrait of “a young girl just ripening into
womanhood (Poe 189 ) As he contemplates the beauty of the painting, he realizes that
it’s intensively entrancing effect lies in the “absolute lifelikeness of expression (Poe
189 ) Searching for an explanation for his feeling when looking at the portrait, he finds
a volume lying at his bedside which explains the paintings and describes their
histories
In the concluding paragraph, the framework concerns itself with the
manuscript that the narrator discovers, detailing the story of the making of the
amazingly lifelike portrait hanging in his bedroom: A young bride of an obsessed
artist, whose first and only love was and still is art, poses for a portrait. But in posing,
the young girl grows daily more dispirited and weak so that slowly her very life wanes
in proportion to the progress of her portrait until the moment of the final brushstroke
when the artist exults, This is indeed Life itself (Poe 191 ) Having finished his
work, he turns to his beloved and finds that she has perished. In the pursuit of artistic
perfection, the young woman’s life has been sacrificed
3. Art - Arabesque as a Clue to Deception and Irony
“The Oval Portrait is remarkable for its dream-like, romantic setting. Even if
Poe excises from the story many of the references to the hallucinatory state of the
narrator in the earlier version “Life in Death , he doesn’t completely reduce the
obviousness of the narrator’s imbalance of mind which produces an ironic double
5 E. A. Poe, Selected Tales, Penguin Books, 1994 , 188. All further quotations from this source are
marked in brackets right after the quotation
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Michael Kratky, 2002, Art and the idea of death-in-life in E. A. Poe's "The Oval Portrait", Munich, GRIN Publishing GmbH
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