Optical impersonality : science, images, and literary modernism

著者

    • Walter, Christina

書誌事項

Optical impersonality : science, images, and literary modernism

Christina Walter

(Hopkins studies in modernism)

Johns Hopkins University Press, c2014

  • : hardback

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. [301]-326) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Western accounts of human vision before the nineteenth century tended to separate the bodily eye from the rational mind. This model gave way in the mid-nineteenth century to one in which the thinking subject, perceiving body, perceptual object, and material world could not be so easily separated. Christina Walter explores how this new physiology of vision provoked writers to reconceive the relations among image, text, sight, and subjectivity. Walter focuses in particular on the ways in which modernist writers such as H.D., Mina Loy, D. H. Lawrence, and T. S. Eliot adapted modern optics and visual culture to develop an alternative to the self or person as a model of the human subject. Critics have long seen modernists as being concerned with an "impersonal" form of writing that rejects the earlier Romantic notion that literature was a direct expression of its author's personality. Walter argues that scholars have misunderstood aesthetic impersonality as an evacuation of the person when it is instead an interrogation of what exactly goes into a personality. She shows that modernist impersonality embraced the embodied and incoherent notion of the human subject that resulted from contemporary physiological science, and traces the legacy of that impersonality in current affect theory. Optical Impersonality will appeal to scholars and advanced students of modernist literature and visual culture and to those interested in the intersections of art, literature, science, and technology.

目次

Acknowledgments Introduction: Eye Don't See: Embodied Vision, Ontology, and Modernist Impersonality The Visual Vernacular, Imagetextuality, and Modernism'sOptical Unconscious The Modern Image and Impersonality's Critique of Identity 1. A Protomodern Picture Impersonality: Walter Pater and Michael Field's Vision Vision, Anders-streben, and Performance in The Renaissance Pater contra Merimee: Toward an Imperfect Impersonality The Visual Field(s): Framing the Politics of Paterian Impersonality 2. Images of Incoherence: The Visual Body of H.D. Impersonaliste Mixing an Imagist Pigment: Modern Art, Science, and Materiality in Sea Garden "Sign-posting" Impersonality in Notes on Thought and Vision Close Up and Impersonal: Subjectivity through the Camera Lens and the Talking Cure Borderline's Aesthetic of Identity Dis-order 3. Getting Impersonal: Body Politics and Mina Loy's "Anti-Thesis of Self-Expression" Feminism and Faces: Staving Off the Threat of Impersonal Negation Optical Experiments and a Poetics "Beyond the Personal" "Insel in the Air": Weighing the Politics of Impersonality 4. D. H. Lawrence's Impersonal Imperative: Vision, Bodies, and theRecovery of Identity "Chaos Lit Up by Visions": Poetic Attention and Its Material Limits From Impersonality to "Creative Identity": A Critical Sleight of Hand Visual Evolution and Identitarian Futurity in Lady Chatterley's Lover 5. Managing the "Feeling into Which We Cannot Peer": T. S. Eliot'sImpersonal Matters "New and Wonderful Visions": The Science of Eliot's Impersonality The Waste and Repair Land: Impersonality, but with Gender Redeeming the Still "Unread Vision": The Family Reunion's Dramatic Bodies Afterword: Modernist Futurity: The "Creative Contagion" of Impersonality and Affect A Shared Visual Vernacular: Affect Theory's Impersonality Open Ended: Affecting Impersonality, Impersonalizing Affect Notes Bibliography Index

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