Romanticism and Visuality: Fragments, History, SpectacleRoutledge, 2007 M12 12 - 246 pages This book investigates the productive crosscurrents between visual culture and literary texts in the Romantic period, focusing on the construction and manipulation of the visual, the impact of new visual media on the literary and historical imagination, and on fragments and ruins as occupying the shifting border between the visible and the invisible. It examines a broad selection of instances that reflect debates over how seeing should itself be viewed: instances, from Daguerre's Diorama, to the staging of Coleridge's play Remorse, to the figure of the Medusa in Shelley's poetry and at the Phantasmagoria, in which the very act of seeing is represented or dramatized. In reconsidering literary engagements with the expanding visual field, this study argues that the popular culture of Regency Britain reflected not just emergent and highly capitalized forms of mass entertainment, but also a lively interest in the aesthetic and conceptual dimensions of looking. What is commonly thought to be the Romantic resistance to the visible gives way to a generative fascination with the visual and its imaginative--even spectacular--possibilities. |
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... complete this work; and I would also like to acknowledge the British Academy, from whom I received a grant to cover the cost of the illustrations. For assistance with picture research, I would like to thank Lucy Jenkins. I would also ...
... complete statements, their fragments urge the independence of the fragment from other forms, as well as from each other, as in the oft-cited: “A fragment, like a miniature work of art, has to be entirely isolated from the surrounding ...
... complete the idea of the whole composition,” the poem is in fact not one fragment, but an assemblage or sequence of fragments.15 To each of its two main parts, written at a three-year interval, Coleridge appended concluding poems that ...
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Contents
The Fragment in Ruins | |
Ruins History Museums | |
Romantic Idealism and the Interference of Sight | |
The Diorama the Double and the Gothic Subject | |
Coleridge Schiller and the play of Semblance | |
Shelley Medusa and the Phantasmagoria | |
Notes | |
Bibliography | |
Index | |