Erotic Irony
The concept of "erotic irony" was introduced by Thomas Mann.
I suppose that he was meditating on the figure of Cupid, the angel of love, who shoots arrows at people so that they may experience the magical thing called love. Thomas Mann defined the wound that love gave to lovers with the term "erotic irony."
So in Buddingbrooks, the ironic treatment of the characters is inspired by love as Thomas Mann sees it, that is, his desire to wound the very people whom he loves, and therefore, show them as incomplete, needy humans.
I was also thinking that erotic irony, in the case of Thomas Mann, also implied homosexual love and that, it was ironic because it was understated.
"The love that dare not speak its name," is how Wilde once described homosexuality although I suspect that others before him coined the phrase.
I just wanted to know if some of you writers out there found that "erotic irony" was also a literary device that could be used to make contradictory trends in a story cohere. For example, if a character hates the antagonist and yet, is doing everything in the character's power to see that the antagonist succeeds.
Some French intellectuals also seem to stick up for some awful world leaders, leaders who represent none of the values that they esteem. Is there some type of erotic irony in this?