ENG 4880/4881: Victorian Literature with Dr. Jill Ehnenn

ENG 4880/4881 Victorian Literature
Spring 2024 TR pm 2-3:15

 

Dr. Jill Ehnenn 

Art Objects and English Words: Ekphrasis and the Making of the Nineteenth-Century “World”

ENG 4880/4881 Victorian Literature  Spring 2024 TR pm 2-3:15  Dr. Jill Ehnenn  Art Objects and English Words: Ekphrasis and the Making of the Nineteenth-Century “World”

…And here, as lamps across the bridge turn pale
In London's smokeless resurrection-light,
Dark breaks to dawn…. (Found, DG Rossetti) 

This course examines Victorian prose and verse in the category of ekphrasis- the verbal representation of a visual representation. We’ll begin with the assertion that ekphrasis operates as an influential mode of world-making that reflects Victorian notions of power/knowledge: vision as the primary source of knowledge and perception; white male masculinity as normative; and the British Empire--with its trade investments from space to objects to flesh--as center of and creator of the modern “world.” 

Yet, nineteenth-century ekphrasis also contains the tools for, and evidence of, non-visual modes of perceiving the world, of being a minoritarian (female, queer, and/or non-white) subject in the world, and reconceiving of the very notion of “world,” itself. Representative authors include Charlotte and Anne Bronte, the Brownings, Christina and DG Rossetti, Walter Pater, Vernon Lee, AC Swinburne, “Michael Field,” Oscar Wilde, and Saronjini Naidu. We will also study visual and non-fiction primary sources, and ground our inquiry in a variety of interdisciplinary theories. The final project for this course will be a digital gallery.

ENG 4880/4881: Victorian Literature with Dr. Jill Ehnenn
Published: Oct 20, 2023 11:48am

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