Art striving to otherness: Walter Pater’s Anders-streben as a historical precursor to intermediality
Keywords:
Walter Pater, Anders-streben, ‘as-if’ experience, immersive experienceAbstract
This paper proposes positioning the idea of British writer Walter Pater (1839-1894) Anders-streben (Pater, 1873) as a precursor to the concept of intermediality, thereby shedding light on the historical perspectives of intermediality. Both Anders-streben and intermediality share a remarkable resemblance in their reliance on bridging media boundaries. The concept is even briefly mentioned in more recent literature on intermediality (Rippl, 2015, p. 4-5), but is not further elaborated upon. In today's artistic climate, characterized by the celebration of crossing artistic boundaries and hybridity in artworks, Anders-streben demonstrates its relevance more than ever. The term, which Pater introduces in his influentual book Studies in the History of the Renaissance (1873), refers to the possibility of arts to transgress the boundaries of their own medium into another art form.
I argue that Anders-streben can be seen as a liminal space or the ‘in-between’ where different art forms enter into dialogue with each other and, moreover, transcend their own mediums. This claim will be supported by linking Anders-streben to Irina Rajewsky’s ‘as-if’ theory (Rajewsky, 2002), illustrating how it fosters an immersive experience within a single medium, which in turn allows for the interplay of imagined other art forms. Through a focus on the medium-specific and transcending qualities of specific artworks, I aim to illuminate how Pater’s concept of transcending artistic borders can enrich the spectator’s aesthetic experience. In essence, I want to show how Anders-streben invites viewers to immerse themselves in a multidimensional artistic journey, blurring the lines between different mediums and enhancing the overall aesthetic encounter.
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Copyright (c) 2024 Lina Vekeman
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