English 841 Fall 2008 Joseph Viscomi
Thurs: 6-8:30 office GL
504
526A, 5th
floor Greenlaw office
hrs. T & th 2-3:15 & by appt.
jsviscom@email.unc.edu
962-8764
Texts:
Revolutions in Romantic Art and Literature
Electronic course pak with extra
readings and selected criticism at:
http://sites.unc.edu/viscomi/romrev
[userid: blake; password:
Catherine]
Blake,
William. The Marriage of Heaven and Hell
(copy H). Ed. G. Keynes, Oxford U. Press, 1975.
Richey,
William, and Daniel Robinson, eds. The
Lyrical Ballads and Related Writings. NY: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2002.
The William Blake Archive: http://blakearchive.org
Resources:
ART RESERVE:
Books and Exhibition Catalogues on Reserve in Art Library, Hanes Art Center,
under catalogue number [see separate sheet]
GASKIN LIBRARY
RESERVE: Many of the books and readings at the Art Library are also in Gaskin,
as are books on romanticism with articles on graphic arts, lyrical poets,
landscape painting. There are also many articles in folders, some assigned
reading and many to assist you in your research.
For Advanced
Research:
Eighteenth-Century
Collections Online
(ECCO), in UNCÕs E-Research Tools. A superb database of 18th c.
books and essays, with a very robust search engine.
Index
for 18th-Century Periodicals and Journals on MicroFilm in Davis Library:
Z692.S5.U56.1981
Bibliography
of 18th-Century Aesthetics,
ed. John Draper. Davis PE 25 A5 HEFT 71
in
Gaskin, article folder.
see
also bibliography on the sublime in Peter de BollaÕs Discourse of the
Sublime
in
Gaskin, article folder (also online)
The English Romantic Poets; A Review of Research and Criticism, ed. Frank Jordan, 4th edition. MLA,
l985. [Davis Reference Shelf, PR590.E5.1985, ROW 29]. This is an annotated
bibliography of books and important articles on the Romantic poets and their
works. Standard critical works on Romantic writers, minor and major, from
before and after1985 to the present can be found in the index of periodical
literature, the annual bibliography published by Garland Press (from 1979), and
journals in the field, e.g., Blake/An
Illustrated Quarterly, The Wordsworth Circle, and Keats-Shelley Journal, which is now online for the years 1994-1999
at: http://www.rc.umd.edu/reference/ksjbib/.
See also http://www.lib.unc.edu/ for UNCÕs E-Research
Tools and Article Databases (e.g., MLA
International Bibliography [1963-2004], and Literature Online), E-Journal Finder, and Print Journals (Catalog Search); the Romantic Circles at http://www.rc.umd.edu, the Norton
Anthology web site at www.wwnorton.com/nael, Voice of the Shuttle (http://vos.ucsb.edu/browse.asp?id=2750), Romantic
Literary Resources (http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/Lit/romantic.html),
and Google Scholar (http://scholar.google.com/schhp?hl=en&tab=ws). For articles online, see the Scholarly Journal Archive at http://www.jstor.org/. Also helpful is the Introduction to Library Research, http://www.lib.unc.edu/instruct/tutorial/.
Blake's
The Book of Thel, The Songs of Innocence
and of Experience, The Marriage of Heaven and Hell, America, a Prophecy,
Europe, a Prophecy, The Book of Urizen are illuminated books that are
reproduced in excellent facsimiles, copies of which are in the Department of
Rare Books, Wilson Library; for excellent digital reproductions of various
exemplary copies of these and other of BlakeÕs illuminated books, as well as
his engravings, drawings, watercolors, and paintings, go to The Blake Archive at http://blakearchive.org [WBA]. The Archive
also contains bibliographies on BlakeÕs work, a profusely illustrated
biography, and an essay on his illuminated printing technique.
NB. ÒcpÓ refers to the page
numbers of the pages in the articles or sections in the course pack;
ÒppÓ refers to page
numbers in books and articles on Reserve.
Ò*Ómeans
you should print this out and bring to class
8/21 Introduction to Course: Drawing as Paradigm, Print as Reproduction:
concepts of taste,
originality, models, education, spontaneity, translation, and deception
Reynolds
on sketches, from Discourse VIII (handout)
8/28 The Sublime, the Beautiful, and the Picturesque
Burke: Introduction
*Burke: Essay on Taste + chap. 1-3 from A Philosophical Enquiry
*Gilpin: Three Essays
*Blake: letters, 1800 to Cumberland, 1802 to Butts
GASKIN LIBRARY
Bicknell, Beauty, Horror and
Immensity , preface to catalogue (folder and catalogue)
Part I of BollaÕs The
Discourse of the Sublime (folder; online)
Hipple, on Burke (folder; online)
Kroeber , ÒRomantic Historicism:
the Temporal SublimeÓ (folder, book)
RARE BOOKS, WILSON LIBRARY,
EXHIBITION ON ROMANTICISM
9/4 The Picturesque and Anti-Picturesque in practice
slide lecture on the
development of watercolor painting, 1760-90
*Gilpin: Two Essays
*Cozens: The New Method, + illus.
*Drawing Manuals: Craig, Aiken, and reviews attacking the
Picturesque
*Hazlitt: On the Picturesque and Ideal
ART RESERVE
Bicknell, WordsworthÕs Guide
to the Lakes,
(introduction, itinerary,
chronology; look at the pictures)
Wilton, Pars' Journey Through
the Alps
Wilcox, British Watercolors
GASKIN LIBRARY
Wilcox, Line of Beauty
Wilton, British Watercolor s, 1750-1850
(examine Smith, Sandby, Towne,
Pars, J.R. Cozens, A. Cozens)
Parris, Landscape in Britain,
browse through
Rosenblum, Romantic Art in Britain,
browse through
Wordsworth, et. al, Wordsworth &
the Age of English Romanticism,
parts 4-5
9/11 WordsworthÕs lyrical poetry
Wordsworth and Coleridge, Advertisement
to the Lyrical Ballads
(Richey ed.)
Coleridge, Biographia Literaria, ch. 14 (Richey ed.)
Wordsworth: poems from the Lyrical
Ballads (Richey ed.)i
GASKIN LIBRARY
Swingle, ÒWordsworthÕs ÔPicture of the
MindÕÓ (folder, online)
Kroeber, ÒBeyond the Imaginable: Wordsworth and TurnerÓ (folder,
online)
Johnston ÒThe Triumphs of Failure:
WordsworthÕs Lyrical Ballads of 1798Ó (folder; online)
9/18 WordsworthÕs lyrical poetry
Wordsworth: poems from the Lyrical
Ballads (Richey ed.)
*Gilpin: Observations on the River Wye
(also in Richey ed.)
GASKIN LIBRARY
Levinson, ÒIntroduction,Ó ÒInsight and oversight: reading ÔTintern
AbbeyÕÓ (folder, online)
Johnston, ÒThe Politics of ÔTintern
AbbeyÕÓ (folder, online)
Abrams, ÒOn Political Readings of Lyrical BalladsÓ (folder,
online)
9/25 ColeridgeÕs lyrical poetry
*Coleridge: Pantisocracy, Eolian Harp
(Effusion XXXV, in Richey, 156).
*Coleridge: Nightingale, Reflections,
Frost at Midnight, Kubla Khan,
*Coleridge:
ÒOn the Principles of Genial CriticismÓ
GASKIN LIBRARY:
Simpson, ÒRomanticism, Criticism, and
TheoryÓ (folder; online)
Keach, ÒRomanticism and LanguageÓ
(folder, online)
Woodring, ÒWhat Coleridge Thought of
PicturesÓ (folder, online)
*Abrams, ÒStructure and Style in the
Greater Romantic LyricÓ (folder, online)
*Magnuson, ÒPolitics of ÔFrost at
MidnightÕÓ (folder, online)
ORAL
REPORTS #1
10/2 WordsworthÕs prose and aesthetics
Wordsworth: Preface to Lyrical Ballads,
2nd edition, and Appendix (Richey ed.)
*Wordsworth:
"On the Sublime and BeautifulÓ
ORAL REPORTS #2
tba Special session: workshop in
illuminated printing and wash drawing
Cozens: The New Method;
art supplies: large sheets of drawing paper and transparent papers,
black ink and large watercolor brushes, pencils
10/9 Technical and aesthetic origin of Blake's
illuminated printing:
*Drawing Manuals: Selection of comments on prints and
drawings
Blake
Archive/About Blake:
Blake biography and illustrated essay on illuminated printing
*Blake: Critical comments on illuminated
printing
*Blake: Prospectus for illuminated books
*Blake: letters: 1800 to Cumberland, 1808 to and from
Cumberland, 1818 to Turner, 1827 to
Cumberland
Gilpin: On Sketching Landscapes, from Three
Essays
Gilpin: Essay on Prints, cp
i-xii, 1-52, 165-174
*Landseer: Lecture III
Selected
Criticism:
Fitzwilliam, The Print in England,
Art & Genius: Printmaking in early 19th c. England pp 6-11
Viscomi, ÒWilliam Blake, Illuminated
Books, and the Concept of DifferenceÓ
Eaves, ÒBlake and the Artistic MachineÓ
*Benjamin, ÒThe Work in the Age of
Mechanical ReproductionÓ
William
Blake Archive:
Explore the illuminated books and Book of Job, Dante, and The Grave engravings
answers to study questions #1 due
10/23 William Blake: The Marriage of
Heaven and Hell (copy H)
Select
Criticism (from William BlakeÕs
Illuminated Books, vol. 3, in Gaskin):
Eaves, Essick, Viscomi, ÒIntroduction to
BlakeÕs Illuminated BooksÓ
Eaves, Essick, Viscomi, ÒIntroduction to
The Marriage of Heaven and HellÓ
William
Blake Archive:
The
Marriage of Heaven and Hell, copies C, D, F, G, I
10/30 William Blake: The Marriage of
Heaven and Hell (copy H)
*Hazlitt:
On Imitation; On Originality
*Blake: letters: 1799 to Trusler (2) and to
Cumberland
*Coleridge:
On Poesy and Art (on imitation and copy)
Select
Criticism:
Eaves, ÒRomantic Expressive TheoryÓ
Viscomi, ÒThe Evolution of The Marriage of Heaven and HellÓ
parts I, II, III
11/6 Technical and aesthetic context for illuminated printing revisited:
BlakeÕs art theories
Reynolds:
Contents and Introduction, ReynoldÕs Intro, and
*Reynolds:
Discourses III, IV, VI, VII
*Blake:
Annotations to Reynolds (c. 1808)
*Blake:
from the Descriptive Catalogue (1809) cp 547-48, cat. # VIII and IX
*Blake:
Public Address (c. 1809)
*Blake: Laocoon
(c. 1827)
*Hazlitt: on Reynolds; Genius and Originality;
Imitation of Nature,;the Ideal
*Hazlitt:
Why the Arts are not Progressive
GASKIN LIBRARY:
Intro and Commentary on Laocoon
in Milton a Poem (vol. 5 of Blake Trust series)
Read, ÒThe Context of BlakeÕs
Public AddressÓ (folder)
Eaves, ÒInquiry into the Real and
Imaginary Obstructions ÉÓ (folder)
Eaves, ÒThe Sister Arts in
British RomanticismÓ (folder)
Hipple, The Beautiful, the
Sublime, and the Picturesque, ch. on Reynolds (folder; online)
Barrell,
ÒThe Republic of Taste,Ó in BarrellÕs The Politics of Art Theory from
Reynolds to Hazlitt (folder; online)
Eaves,
review of Barrell (folder; online)
ORAL REPORTS #3:
11/13 Watercolor
Painting
slide lecture on Girtin, Cotman,
Turner, Constable
*Turner,
Constable: background readings
*Hazlitt:
On the Pleasure of Painting
ART RESERVE
Wilcox, British Watercolors
Butlin, TurnerÕs Watercolors
Gadney, ConstableÕs Oil Sketches
*Parris, *Rosenblum: browse
GASKIN LIBRARY
Wilton, British Watercolors,
1750-1850 (entries on Girtin, Cotman, Turner, Constable);
Reynolds, ConstableÕs England
Parris, Landscape in Britain
Rosenthal, Constable: The
Painter and His Landscapes
Rosenblum, Romantic Art in
Britain
Shanes, Turner: The Great
Watercolors
*Kroeber, ÒThe Clarity of the
Mysterious and the Obscurity of the Familiar: Friedrich
and TurnerÓ (folder; online)
*Meisel, ÒThe Material Sublime:
Martin, Byron, Turner, and the TheaterÓ (folder; online)
Wordsworth and the Age of
English Romanticism, part 6
ORAL REPORTS #4
answers to study
questions #2 due.
11/20 WordsworthÕs Prelude
*Wordsworth: Prospectus to the Recluse
*Wordsworth: Prelude, parallel
text: books 11/12
GASKIN LIBRARY
Johnston, ÒThe Romantic Idea-Elegy: the
Nature of Politics and the Politics of NatureÓ
(folder. online)
Simpson, ÒCriticism, Politics, and
Style in WordsworthÕs PoetryÓ (folder, online)
ORAL REPORTS:
12/4 WordsworthÕs Prelude
*Wordsworth:
Prelude, parallel text: books 12/13, 13/14
12/12 Papers Due
Requirements:
short essay
answers to study questions (due 10/9 and 11/13)
one oral report
(this can be collaborative)
research or
critical essay
The paper is due
at the end of the semester but will be developed concurrent with the class. The
paper can be on any of the poets, artists, critics, or printmakers of the
period, or any interdisciplinary topic, that is, a comparative analysis of
works in various media, or on any relevant aesthetic issue, theme, subject, or concept,
including a further development of study or exam questions or your oral report.
The paper can be a collaborative and/or multi-media Web project. I will expect
you to discuss your ideas for papers with me and with other members in the
class.
Study questions can also be used as topics for your class paper.
#1. Answer two of the following questions
in 4 or more pages each. Due 10/9
1. Discuss the
ways in which Burke's idea of the sublime or Gilpin's idea of the picturesque
figure into the poetry of Wordsworth or Coleridge. Focus on passages from poems
in the Lyrical Ballads, or the Prelude, or one or two other
poems.
2. Discuss the
ways in which Burke's idea of the sublime or Gilpin's idea of the picturesque
figure into the prose of Wordsworth or Coleridge. Focus on passages from the
Preface, essay on WordsworthÕs "The Sublime and the Beautiful," or
ColeridgeÕs "On the Principles of Genial Criticism."
3. Examine the
themes of mediation and/or natural vs arbitrary sign-systems, as expressed in
the writings or creative works (paintings, drawings, prints, or poems) of two
or more poets and artists.
4. Discuss the
use of painting as a metaphor or analogy in the poetry and/or prose of
Wordsworth and Coleridge.
5. Discuss the
ways in Wordsworth and/or Coleridge ÒpictureÓ nature, i.e., how they verbally
describe pictures and the picturesque in light of or in contrast to the
fashions of the day.
6. What are
Cozens objectives in the New Method and why does he consider them
important? Are they realized in practice? If so, how; if not, why not?
7. Define the
Picturesque traveler and argue the case for or against him, using the writings
and works of the critics and painters to support your claims.
8. In what ways
does Gilpin see himself as extending the aesthetic theories of Burke and/or
Reynolds?
9. Discuss a few
watercolor drawings or paintings that express Burkean ideas of the sublime and
beautiful.
#2. Answer two of the following questions
in 4 or more pages each. Due 11/13.
1. Discuss the
ways in which Blake and Landseer agree and disagree about the state and status
of printmaking in England in the Romantic period.
2. What is
Blake's idea of books, prints, and/or readers in The Marriage of Heaven and
Hell?
3. Discuss the
ways in which text and/or illustrations of The Marriage of Heaven and Hell
or The Book of Urizen comment on the creative process, perception, or
the usurpation of originals by imitations.
4. Reynolds
recommends "not the industry of the hands, but of the mind." Discuss
in detail what he means by this and why he advocates this position.
5. Blake states
"How very Anxious Reynolds is to Disprove and Contemn Spiritual
Perceptions." Explain what Blake means by this and why he says it.
6. Both Blake
and Reynolds are concerned with the way that art is taught and perceived.
Examine some of the main topics, like inspiration and genius, on which they
agree and disagree.
7. Discuss how
Blake and Hazlitt agree and disagree regarding theories of Reynolds or on the
topics of progress in the arts, imitation, genius, and originality.
8. Compare and
contrast the drawing instructions and practices of Cozens (or Gilpin) and Blake
(or Craig), using examples from their work and/or writings (or works executed
in their styles) to support your findings.
9. How do you
think Burke, Reynolds, Blake, and Cozens would respond to the watercolors of
Turner reproduced in Butlin? Explain their responses by citing their writings
or painting styles.
10. Examine
HazlittÕs views on originality and imitation or on depicting nature in art and
compare them with WordsworthÕs, ColeridgeÕs, or BlakeÕs.
Study questions and potential topics for
final papers
1. Read the
Mount Snowdon episode in the last book of the Prelude in light of WordsworthÕs essay on the Sublime and
Beautiful.
2. How does
Wordsworth express the Òtyranny of the eyeÓ and oneÕs escape from it? Or how
looking is transformed into seeing/vision/perception of a deeper kind?
3. Discuss the
painting styles of Towne, J. R. Cozens, and Girtin in relation to one another,
to the topographical ideal, and to the late watercolor paintings of Turner.
4. Discuss
various linguistic strategies used by W or C for representing the mind in
motion.
ART RESERVE BOOK
LIST
ND1140.B36.
1986
Barrell, J.
Political Theory of Painting from Reynolds to Hazlitt
ND1354.4.B47.1
Bermingham, A. Landscape and
Ideology
N6766.B52.
1981
Bicknell,
P. Beauty,
Horror and Immensity
ND2240.B535.
1987
Bicknell,
P. Gipin to
Ruskin
DA
670. L1 W67. 1984 Bicknell,
P. Wordsworth's
Guide to the Lakes
PR 4142. E285. 1998 Blake,
W.
The Early Illuminated Books
PR
4144.U7. 1995
Blake, W.
The Urizen Books
N6797.B57.B87 Butlin,
M. Complete Paintings
& Drawings of W. Blake
Folio
ND 1942 T8. B8 1965 Butlin,
M. Turner's
Watercolors
N6766.C8 Cummings,
F. Romantic Art in
Britain
PE 25 A5 HEFT 71
Draper,
J. Bibliography
on18th Century Aesthetics [Davis]
NE628.P756.
1985
Fitzwilliam The
Print in England
ND 1942 C66 F55 Fleming-Williams
Constable's Landscape Drawings
NC
242 C5 G33 Gadney,
R. Constable's
Oil Sketches
NE
850 G37 1986 Gasgoinge,
B. How
to Recognize Prints [reference section]
Folio
ND497 C7. H5 1985
Hill,
D.
Constable's English Landscape Scenery
BH221.G72.H5
Hipple,
W. J. The Beautiful,
The Sublime, The Picturesque
BH301.L3
H8
Hussey,
C. The
Picturesque
ND
1354.4 P37.1973 Parris
Landscape in Britain
N6797 C67 A4.1982 Rajnai,
M.
John Sell Cotman
N6766.C8
Rosenblum Romantic
Art in Britain
Folio
ND 1942 T8. A4 Shanes,
E. Turner's
Picturesque Views in England & Wales
NE 642.B5.V57.1993 Viscomi,
J.
Blake and the Idea of the Book
ND
1928 W533. 1985 Wilcox
British Watercolors
ND
1928 W55. 1977 Wilton
British Watercolor 1750-1850
N6797.T88
A4. 1980
Wilton
Turner and The Sublime
Folio
NC 242 P33. W5 Wilton
William Pars Journey Through the Alps
ND
1942 T8. W55 1982 B Wilton
Turner Abroad
Topics for Oral Reports
#1
and #2
In Search for the Picturesque, M. Andrews
Grand tours and Cook's Tours, Lynne Withey
18th c. English Landscape Gardening (see J. Dixon Hunt)
Alexander Cozens or J. R. Cozens
Capability Brown, the landscape architect
Dr. Syntax (a parody of William Gilpin, by Rowlandson and Coombs)
Anne Bermingham, The Ideology of Landscape
Drawing's role in the education of women (see Bermingham, Sha, and essays of V. Knox, E. Darwin, John Burton, Hannah More, John Moir; de Bolla has a good bib on the subject)
Edward Dayes, on Taste or Drawing, from his Works (1805)
Humphry Repton, landscape architect
The English country house (see Mark Girouard and Clive Wainwright)
The grand tour
The picturesque tour, or a specific tour once taken by a painter, poet, or connoisseur
The English Lake District of painters or poets
The Man of Taste
Achibald Alison, on Taste (see Hipple, Draper)
Edmund Burke
William Gilpin
Connoisseurship (see C. J. Gibson-Wood)
Uvedale Price, theorist of the picturesque (see Hipple, Draper)
Richard Paine Knight, theorist of the picturesque (see Hipple, Draper, N. Penny)
WW Descriptive
Sketches and Evening Walk
WW Ruined Cottage or
Pedlar
WW's Guide to the
Lakes
Kantian Sublime
Wordsworth and the Sublime (Weiskel or Ferguson vs Wlecke)
Theresa Kelly, Revisionary Aesthetics (in Wordsworth)
Tintern Abbey as popular site visited by picturesque tourists-or one comparable Landscape, a Poem (Gilpin)
WW and travel literature (see Coe)
WW and Constable (see Kroeber)
George Beaumont, art patron and
friend of WW (see F. Own and D. Brown)2Green
Romanticism (see Kroeber's Ecological Literary Imagination)
James Thomson's The Seasons
18th c. Topographical poetry
John Clare
#3
William Hazlitt Joshua Reynolds
British Institution
Royal Academy British Museum
Blake and the Sublime (see Deluca)
Morton Paley, The Apocalyptic Sublime
Idea of patronage (see Prince Hoare's Director or The Artist, in Rare Books)
Boydell's Shakespeare (large prints after paintings of scenes from Shakespeare; see me for bib)
Morris Eaves, The
Counter-Arts Conspiracy: Art and Industry in the Age of Blake
Robert Essick, The Language of Adam (study of Blake in light of 18th century theories of language)
Rudolf Ackerman's Repository of Art
Prince Hoare (e 19th c. art critic) on Cultivating the Public's Taste and the influence of Art on Morals Thomas Rowlandson, biography, The Microcosm, or satires of Regent society
James Gillray and the satirical/political etchings
Paul Sandby, experiments as painter and/or etcher,
"Original Genius" (see Draper for bib)
Alexander Gerard, on Genius (see Hipple, Draper)
#4
The Gothic in art, architecture, or literature
Ruins, as image and/or idea, in romantic art or literature Thomas GirtinÕs panoramas or watercolor landscapes
Turner's tours, or one of his specific tour
Turner's poetry
Turner's prints
Constable's prints
ConstableÕs skies
ConstableÕs England
One of ConstableÕs six-footer paintings (e.g., Haywain) and its preliminary sketch
MISC.
Ut Pictora Poesis (see Rensselaer W. Lee)
Wordsworth and "Romantic Religion"
Shee's Rhymes on Art, 1809
Thomas Stothard: The Mechanisms of Art Patronage in England, c. 1800. S. Bennett
The Discovery of Painting: The Growth of Interest in the Arts in England 1680-1768, Iain Pears Selling Art in Georgian England: The Rise of Arthur Pond, L. Lippincott
Politics of the Picturesque, ed. Copley and Garside.
The Romantic Ethic and the Spirit of Modern Consumerism, Colin Campell
"Portrait Painting as a Business Enterprise in London in the 1780s" M. Pointon (Art History 7 1984) Landscape Imagery and Urban Culture in early 19`h-c. Britain, A. Hemingway
Forgery and the Philosophy of Art
Hogarth's Analysis of
Beauty
Rousseau's Essai sur l'origine des langues, ch. 16 "Fausse analogie entre les couleurs et les sons" Bromley, on painting's superiority over poetry