Seeing Impossible Things

Proust at the Limits of the Reader’s Imagination

Author(s) Maury Bruhn

Language: English

Genre(s): Literary Criticism

Series: Studies in Visual Culture

  • September 2026 · 216 pages ·216x138mm

  • · Hardback - 9781837724284
  • · eBook - pdf - 9781837724291
  • · eBook - epub - 9781837724307

What do we see in our mind’s eye when we read Marcel Proust’s À la recherche du temps perdu? The Recherche is full of objects behaving strangely, visual perspectives shifting unexpectedly, new dimensions opening within the familiar, and the lines between imagination, memory and perception blurring and collapsing. The present study argues that to see Proust’s universe, the reader must work to visualise the hitherto impossible, testing their cognitive prowess against dense descriptive challenges. Its chapters analyse how Proust’s descriptions of material, space, energy and time guide reader visualisation, demonstrating how clusters of these descriptions have the aggregate effect of expanding the reader’s imagination beyond its habitual conceptual constraints. Seeing Impossible Things ultimately proposes that the unity of the Recherche lies not in an accumulation of meaning in the form of an overarching theory of aesthetics, but in an accumulation of imaginative practice culminating in the novel’s final image. 

Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
Introduction: Seeing Impossible Things
Chapter One: Material
I. Proust’s Chardin
II. The Material of Memory
Chapter Two: Space
I. Viewing Balbec
II. Textual Landscapes Beyond Ekphrasis
Chapter Three: Energy
I. Saint-Loup’s Simultaneous Multiplicity
II. Proust’s Planes at the Limit of Representation
Chapter Four: Time
I. Path One: The Church as Artistic Instruction
II. Path Two: The Combray Church, Experience and Memory
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Author(s): Maury Bruhn

Maury Bruhn is Assistant Professor of French at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

Read more