In the Mind's Eye : The Visual Impulse in Diderot, Baudelaire and Ruskin (Faux Titre)

In the Mind's Eye : The Visual Impulse in Diderot, Baudelaire and Ruskin (Faux Titre)

  • ただいまウェブストアではご注文を受け付けておりません。 ⇒古書を探す
  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 310 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9789042010352
  • DDC分類 809.034

Full Description

This comparative, interdisciplinary study investigates the relationship between literature and the visual arts in France and Britain from 1750-1900. Through a close examination of the prose writings of Diderot, Baudelaire and Ruskin, read against the background of contemporary philosophy, aesthetics and theories of language, In the Mind's Eye proposes a new interpretation of the influence and rivalries underlying the development of art criticism as a genre during this period. The visual impulse - the desire to transcend the limitations of language and make the reader see - is located within the historical traditions of ekphrasis, enargeia and the paragone, while in each chapter, the individual author's theories of the mind, memory and imagination provide a critical framework for his stylistic experiments. In the Mind's Eye presents an in-depth analysis of the cultural, theoretical and aesthetic implications of artistic border crossings, and by contextualizing the movement toward visual/verbal hybridity in the fiction and criticism of Diderot, Baudelaire and Ruskin, brings new perspectives to nineteenth-century studies in art and literature.

Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction The Visual Impulse in Prose: Border Crossings and the Anxieties of Interdisciplinarity
Chapter 1 Towards a Visual Discourse: Theories of the Origin of Language, Enargeia, Ekphrasis and Associationism
Chapter 2 Diderot's Visual Prose: Gesture, Hieroglyph and the Visual Imagination
Chapter 3 Baudelaire and the Salons: The Critic as Artist
Chapter 4 Les Paradis Artificiels, Le Surnaturel and the Prose Poem : The Aesthetics of Psychological Flânerie
Chapter 5 Ruskin and the Language of Images
Chapter 6 Ruskin's Moving Images: The Politics and the Poetics of the Paragone
Conclusion Diderot, Baudelaire, Ruskin: Envisioning Visionaries
Bibliography