Saturday, January 25, 2020



Symbolic Death and Rebirth in Little Francis and Down Below

Kristoffer Noheden

Abstract

In 1940, the surrealist artist and writer Leonora Carrington (1917–2011) was incarcerated ina Spanish mental asylum, having been pronounced “incurably insane.”

Down Below , an account of the incident first published in the surrealist journal VVV in 1944, acted as an important part in her recovery from mental illness. In it, she works through her experience in the light of her reading of Pierre Mabille’s (1908–1952) book Mirror of the Marvelous (1940).

This work let Carrington interpret the intricate correspondences she perceived during herillness through the imagery of alchemy, and allowed her to find a similarity between herexperience and the trials depicted in many myths, thus infusing her harrowing experiences with symbolic meaning.

This article discusses the significance of Mabille and his work forCarrington’s sense of regained health. This is further emphasised through a comparison ofthe motif of symbolic death in Down Below

with its depiction in Carrington’s earlier, partly autobiographical, novella “Little Francis” (1937–38). The depiction of a loss of self in this work prefigures the ordeals in Down Below, but it is only in the latter text that Carrington also effects a form of rebirth. The article proposes that the enactment of a symbolic rebirth means that

Down Below can be considered a form of initiation into the surrealist marvellous, and that Carrington’s experiences both parallel and prefigure surrealism’s concerns with esotericism, myth, and initiation, during and after the Second World War.

Keywords

Pierre Mabille; alchemy; myth; André Breton; esotericism; psychosis

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