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Narratives in Perambulation: Poe’s ‘The Man of the Crowd’ and Metsakes’ ‘Aυτόχειρ’*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 January 2016
Extract
An author Edgar Allan Poe was initially introduced to the Greek public of the late nineteenth century by Roi’des, and soon became well-known through a series of translations in the contemporary press. ‘The Man of the Crowd’ (1840) appeared in a somewhat adapted translation in the journal Eστíα of 1890. Five years later, Michael Metsakes, who was familiar with Poe’s tales, published in the newspaper a short story which, despite its affinities to ‘The Man of the Crowd’, preserves a remarkable individuality. What rather brings these two texts together, otherwise products of two quite different cultures, is the awareness shared by their authors of the rise of a new era. Writing just before the Civil War, Poe experiences the tensions connected with the upsurge of Jacksonian democracy. The period witnessed an unprecedented increase in urban population following the transformation of the United States from an agricultural country into a commercial and industrial one. The American dream of freedom and justice had to come to terms with the fear of the mob, economic inequality, and man’s dependence on the machine. Sensitive to the new cultural situation which was beginning to emerge in his country, Poe deplores America’s increasing industrialisation and is preoccupied with the disintegration of personality it generates. Poe’s awareness of the new age is apparent in ‘The Man of the Crowd’, a text noticed by both Baudelaire and Walter Benjamin for its anticipation of modernity.
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- Copyright © The Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman and Modern Greek Studies, University of Birmingham 1996
References
1. For this characterisation by Palamas see 23.6.1918.
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31. The impressionistic technique of the narrative draws attention to the issue of the means of arriving at knowledge by suggesting the dominance of viewpoint over material reality. In this context both texts foreground the preoccupation of literary impressionists at the beginnings of the twentieth century with the importance of the perceiving consciousness and the phenomenological relation of subject to object.
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35. Though it is not the issue of this article, it should be noted that the meandering of the phrase combined with the arrangement of the narrative on modulations of a key theme create a musical prose according to the contemporary precepts of the Symbolists. In the organisation of the narrative on a musical pattern is poignant — as Maronites, , 178, was the first to notice — while musicality, both as a structural element and thematic motif imbues many of the in all cases it exemplifies Metsakes’ wish to write a See Metsakes, , 233-8 (236).
36. The tragic equation of human life in its variety with a physical phenomenon is also the subject of . In both texts, as actuality disintegrates into a set of repeated movements and fragmented discussions, human life loses its momentum and becomes meaningless.
37. Metsakes, , 281, 279.
38. Metsakes, , 277, 280. Although the narrator does not comment on the main economic activity of the city, the description of the deserted and silent docklands with the scales for the weighing of the raisins and the packing cases for their transportation hints at its strongly commercialised character.
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46. It is characteristic that when the Greek translator removed all these intertextual allusions, probably because of their obscurity, he rendered the text less perplexing and therefore less suggestive.
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