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  1. This chapter focuses on melancholy itself, the condition and its history. It proposes that for Baudelaire melancholy is neither a form of pathological mental disorder nor a mere mood but the irremediable default experience of all humanity—what he terms ‘le Mal’.

  2. 26 de dic. de 2023 · Charles Baudelaire. Te explicamos quién fue Charles Baudelaire, cuáles fueron sus principales obras literarias y por qué fue el más grande de los “poetas malditos” de la Francia del siglo XIX. Baudelaire escribió varios poemarios importantes, como Las flores del mal.

  3. At 45 years of age, Charles Baudelaire suffered a left hemispheric stroke that left him with a right hemiplegia and severe aphasia. In this chapter, we investigate the nature of his symptoms, drawing mostly on his own and his contemporaries' correspondence.

  4. In 1862, Baudelaire began to suffer nightmares and increasingly bad health. He left Paris for Brussels in 1863 to give a series of lectures, but had several strokes that resulted in partial paralysis. On August 31, 1867, at the age of forty-six, Charles Baudelaire died in Paris.

  5. A rebel of near-heroic proportions, Baudelaire gained notoriety and public condemnation for writings that dealt with taboo subjects such as sex, death, homosexuality, depression and addiction, while his personal life was blighted with familial acrimony, ill health, and financial misfortune.

  6. 14 de may. de 2024 · Charles Baudelaire was a French poet, translator, and literary and art critic whose reputation rests primarily on Les Fleurs du mal (1857; The Flowers of Evil), which was perhaps the most important and influential poetry collection published in Europe in the 19th century.

  7. The first chapter of this dissertation, "Dead Silent," explores Baudelaire's use of apophasis as a rhetorical tactic to thwart the censoring force of death as what prevents the speaking subject from responding.