To the Hermitage - Malcolm Bradbury
To
The Hermitage is Sir Malcolm Bradbury's first novel in nearly a decade, and its
length and ambition provide some clue as to why it has been so long in the making.
The novel begins with the arrival of the great Enlightenment philosopher Denis
Diderot at the Russian court of Catherine the Great, who is "drawn to
grand ideas and learning; she looks to Paris" and to Denis Diderot, busily
completing his Encyclopaedia, the great work of the European "Age of
Reason".
Bradbury's world of "Then" suddenly cuts to "Now", and the
arrival in Stockholm in 1993 of the narrator, a thinly veiled self-portrait of
a weather-beaten novelist and literary critic who has been invited on a
"Baltic junket", an academic gathering to discuss the Diderot
Project, a Swedish-funded enterprise to investigate the life and works of the
great philosopher.
Bradbury's novel proceeds to deftly seesaw between the Age of Reason championed
by Diderot and the present so-called end of history and "triumph" of
global capitalism. It ruefully, but also very humorously, reflects on the
perils of intellectual idealism then and now, and explores the ways in which
"history is the lies the present tells in order to make sense of the
past".
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Creada: 06/110/2008
Última Actualización: 06/11/2008