维多利亚诗歌中的坚守信仰

IF 0.1 3区 文学 0 POETRY
Erik Gray
{"title":"维多利亚诗歌中的坚守信仰","authors":"Erik Gray","doi":"10.1353/vp.2024.a933696","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\n<p> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> Keeping Faith in Victorian Poetry <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Erik Gray (bio) </li> </ul> <p><strong>I</strong> felt honored to be one of the young scholars invited in 2003 to contribute to the special issue of this journal, “Whither Victorian Poetry?” on the current and future state of the field. Taking its title from Tennyson, my essay, “A Bounded Field: Situating Victorian Poetry in the Literary Landscape,” argued that studies of Victorian poetry tended to look inward rather than reaching across temporal, geographic, and generic boundaries. Focusing on the surge of interest in female Victorian poets that had begun about fifteen years earlier, I noted the critical tendency to consider those poets primarily either in isolation or in relationship to each other, and I urged the importance of studying them in relation to a more expansive context. Unable to resist another pun on “field,” I chose to illustrate my point using Michael Field’s “The Sleeping Venus” (1892). Field’s poem describes a 1510 painting by Giorgione that depicts the nude Venus reclining full-length in an idealized landscape. The poets describe the figure’s posture, not unreasonably, as suggesting an act of autoeroticism. But they also emphasize the way the central figure echoes and participates in the interplay of shapes and lines of the broader landscape in which she appears. The point of my reading, explicitly, was to take the figure of Venus as a symbol for Victorian poetry: we should not become so fascinated with our field and its internal relations, I argued, that we ignore its relation to a wider context; rather we should follow the example of Michael Field and try to see the whole picture. Implicitly, though, my argument seemed to offer Venus as a symbol of the <em>critic</em> of Victorian poetry. <em>Do you see this figure</em> (I said, in essence, to my colleagues)—<em>somnolent, oblivious, self-pleasuring? That’s you</em>.</p> <p>Rereading the essay now for the first time in twenty years, I am surprised by a few things. I’m surprised at my presumptuousness. I’m a little surprised that I have continued to have a career in this field and even to be welcomed within it. Even so, I stand by what I wrote. It’s always a safe <strong>[End Page 437]</strong> bet, of course, to call for breadth and inclusiveness rather than narrowness and strictly defined boundaries—nothing remarkable there. But what strikes me in retrospect is how my plea for expanding our field of vision prefigured, however faintly, the two most significant calls to action to have appeared in Victorian studies since that time (both of them, as it happens, jointly authored): the Manifesto of the V21 Collective (2015) and “Undisciplining Victorian Studies” (2020), by Ronjaunee Chatterjee, Alicia Mireles Christoff, and Amy R. Wong, which introduced a special issue of <em>Victorian Studies</em> on the same topic.</p> <p>I say “faintly” because “A Bounded Field” proposed, rather modestly, that Victorian poetry studies should pay more heed to broader literary and artistic contexts, whereas both of the later statements are far more ambitious. The V21 Manifesto, published online by a group of early-career scholars, decries the prevalence in Victorian studies of “positivist historicism,” meaning the accumulation of ever more detailed information and theses about the past. This critical methodology “is enabled by and sustains a situation in which Victorianists are our own and only interlocutors. It fails to imagine paths of argument compelling to scholars who do not care about Victorians as Victorians.”<sup>1</sup> The Manifesto therefore calls for post-historicist ways of thinking that will make our field interesting to those outside of it by embracing “theory” (broadly conceived) and “a new openness to <em>presentism</em>.”<sup>2</sup> “Undisciplining Victorian Studies,” meanwhile, is at once more narrowly focused and more far-reaching, in that it urges scholars of Victorian literature and culture to reconsider every aspect of their practice. “[O]ur goal is to interrogate and challenge our field’s marked resistance to centering racial logic,” the authors write. “[W]e want to illuminate how race and racial difference subtend our most cherished objects of study, our most familiar historical and theoretical frameworks, our most engrained scholarly protocols, and the very demographics of our field.”<sup>3</sup> Both pieces thus call for us...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":54107,"journal":{"name":"VICTORIAN POETRY","volume":"67 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2024-07-25","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Keeping Faith in Victorian Poetry\",\"authors\":\"Erik Gray\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/vp.2024.a933696\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\\n<p> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> Keeping Faith in Victorian Poetry <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Erik Gray (bio) </li> </ul> <p><strong>I</strong> felt honored to be one of the young scholars invited in 2003 to contribute to the special issue of this journal, “Whither Victorian Poetry?” on the current and future state of the field. Taking its title from Tennyson, my essay, “A Bounded Field: Situating Victorian Poetry in the Literary Landscape,” argued that studies of Victorian poetry tended to look inward rather than reaching across temporal, geographic, and generic boundaries. Focusing on the surge of interest in female Victorian poets that had begun about fifteen years earlier, I noted the critical tendency to consider those poets primarily either in isolation or in relationship to each other, and I urged the importance of studying them in relation to a more expansive context. Unable to resist another pun on “field,” I chose to illustrate my point using Michael Field’s “The Sleeping Venus” (1892). Field’s poem describes a 1510 painting by Giorgione that depicts the nude Venus reclining full-length in an idealized landscape. The poets describe the figure’s posture, not unreasonably, as suggesting an act of autoeroticism. But they also emphasize the way the central figure echoes and participates in the interplay of shapes and lines of the broader landscape in which she appears. The point of my reading, explicitly, was to take the figure of Venus as a symbol for Victorian poetry: we should not become so fascinated with our field and its internal relations, I argued, that we ignore its relation to a wider context; rather we should follow the example of Michael Field and try to see the whole picture. Implicitly, though, my argument seemed to offer Venus as a symbol of the <em>critic</em> of Victorian poetry. <em>Do you see this figure</em> (I said, in essence, to my colleagues)—<em>somnolent, oblivious, self-pleasuring? That’s you</em>.</p> <p>Rereading the essay now for the first time in twenty years, I am surprised by a few things. I’m surprised at my presumptuousness. I’m a little surprised that I have continued to have a career in this field and even to be welcomed within it. Even so, I stand by what I wrote. It’s always a safe <strong>[End Page 437]</strong> bet, of course, to call for breadth and inclusiveness rather than narrowness and strictly defined boundaries—nothing remarkable there. But what strikes me in retrospect is how my plea for expanding our field of vision prefigured, however faintly, the two most significant calls to action to have appeared in Victorian studies since that time (both of them, as it happens, jointly authored): the Manifesto of the V21 Collective (2015) and “Undisciplining Victorian Studies” (2020), by Ronjaunee Chatterjee, Alicia Mireles Christoff, and Amy R. Wong, which introduced a special issue of <em>Victorian Studies</em> on the same topic.</p> <p>I say “faintly” because “A Bounded Field” proposed, rather modestly, that Victorian poetry studies should pay more heed to broader literary and artistic contexts, whereas both of the later statements are far more ambitious. The V21 Manifesto, published online by a group of early-career scholars, decries the prevalence in Victorian studies of “positivist historicism,” meaning the accumulation of ever more detailed information and theses about the past. This critical methodology “is enabled by and sustains a situation in which Victorianists are our own and only interlocutors. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要: 维多利亚时期诗歌中的信仰 埃里克-格雷(Erik Gray)(简历) 2003 年,我有幸受邀成为本刊特刊 "维多利亚时期诗歌何去何从?"的撰稿人之一,探讨这一领域的现状和未来。我的文章标题取自丁尼生,题为 "有界的领域:维多利亚时期诗歌在文学景观中的定位 "一文认为,对维多利亚时期诗歌的研究倾向于向内看,而不是跨越时间、地理和一般界限。我关注的焦点是大约十五年前开始的对维多利亚时期女诗人的兴趣热潮,我注意到批评界倾向于将这些诗人主要孤立起来或相互联系起来进行研究,我敦促将她们与更广阔的背景联系起来进行研究的重要性。我忍不住又用了 "田野 "这个双关语,选择用迈克尔-菲尔德的《沉睡的维纳斯》(1892 年)来说明我的观点。菲尔德的这首诗描述的是 1510 年乔尔乔内的一幅画,画中的维纳斯全身裸体躺在一幅理想化的风景画中。诗人描述了人物的姿态,不无道理地暗示了一种自慰行为。但他们也强调了中心人物与她所处的更广阔的风景中的形状和线条相互呼应和参与的方式。我的解读明确地指出,维纳斯的形象是维多利亚时期诗歌的象征:我认为,我们不应该如此着迷于我们的领域及其内部关系,而忽略了它与更广阔背景的关系;相反,我们应该以迈克尔-菲尔德为榜样,努力看到整个画面。不过,我的论点似乎隐含地将维纳斯作为维多利亚诗歌批评家的象征。你看到这个形象了吗(我实质上是对我的同事们说的)--懒散、忘我、自娱自乐?这就是你。二十年来第一次重读这篇文章,我对一些事情感到惊讶。我对自己的自以为是感到惊讶。我对自己能在这一领域继续工作,甚至受到欢迎感到有些惊讶。即便如此,我还是坚持我写的东西。当然,呼吁广泛性和包容性,而不是狭隘性和严格界定的界限,这总是一个安全的赌注 [第 437 页结束]--没有什么了不起的。但现在回想起来,令我印象深刻的是,我对扩大我们视野的呼吁是如何预示着,无论多么微弱,自那时以来维多利亚研究领域出现的两份最重要的行动呼吁(恰巧这两份呼吁都是共同撰写的):《V21集体宣言》(2015年)和罗恩贾尼-查特吉(Ronjaunee Chatterjee)、艾丽西亚-米莱斯-克里斯托夫(Alicia Mireles Christoff)和艾米-R-黄(Amy R. Wong)撰写的《维多利亚研究的非学科化》(2020年),这两份宣言介绍了关于同一主题的《维多利亚研究》特刊。我之所以说 "微弱",是因为《有边界的领域》只是谦虚地建议维多利亚时期的诗歌研究应更多地关注更广泛的文学和艺术背景,而后来的两份声明则雄心勃勃得多。V21宣言》由一群早期学者在网上发表,谴责维多利亚时期研究中盛行的 "实证主义历史主义",即积累更多关于过去的详细资料和论述。这种批判性方法论 "促成并维持了维多利亚时代研究者成为我们自己和唯一对话者的局面。因此,《宣言》呼吁采用后历史主义的思维方式,通过接受 "理论"(广义上的概念)和 "对现世主义的新的开放性",使我们的研究领域能够引起研究领域之外的人的兴趣。"维多利亚研究的非学科化 "则同时具有更狭隘的针对性和更深远的意义,因为它敦促维多利亚文学和文化学者重新考虑其实践的方方面面。"作者写道:"我们的目标是质疑和挑战我们领域对以种族逻辑为中心的明显抵制。"我们希望阐明种族和种族差异是如何影响我们最珍视的研究对象、我们最熟悉的历史和理论框架、我们最根深蒂固的学术规范以及我们领域的人口统计的。"3 因此,这两篇文章都呼吁我们...
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Keeping Faith in Victorian Poetry
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Keeping Faith in Victorian Poetry
  • Erik Gray (bio)

I felt honored to be one of the young scholars invited in 2003 to contribute to the special issue of this journal, “Whither Victorian Poetry?” on the current and future state of the field. Taking its title from Tennyson, my essay, “A Bounded Field: Situating Victorian Poetry in the Literary Landscape,” argued that studies of Victorian poetry tended to look inward rather than reaching across temporal, geographic, and generic boundaries. Focusing on the surge of interest in female Victorian poets that had begun about fifteen years earlier, I noted the critical tendency to consider those poets primarily either in isolation or in relationship to each other, and I urged the importance of studying them in relation to a more expansive context. Unable to resist another pun on “field,” I chose to illustrate my point using Michael Field’s “The Sleeping Venus” (1892). Field’s poem describes a 1510 painting by Giorgione that depicts the nude Venus reclining full-length in an idealized landscape. The poets describe the figure’s posture, not unreasonably, as suggesting an act of autoeroticism. But they also emphasize the way the central figure echoes and participates in the interplay of shapes and lines of the broader landscape in which she appears. The point of my reading, explicitly, was to take the figure of Venus as a symbol for Victorian poetry: we should not become so fascinated with our field and its internal relations, I argued, that we ignore its relation to a wider context; rather we should follow the example of Michael Field and try to see the whole picture. Implicitly, though, my argument seemed to offer Venus as a symbol of the critic of Victorian poetry. Do you see this figure (I said, in essence, to my colleagues)—somnolent, oblivious, self-pleasuring? That’s you.

Rereading the essay now for the first time in twenty years, I am surprised by a few things. I’m surprised at my presumptuousness. I’m a little surprised that I have continued to have a career in this field and even to be welcomed within it. Even so, I stand by what I wrote. It’s always a safe [End Page 437] bet, of course, to call for breadth and inclusiveness rather than narrowness and strictly defined boundaries—nothing remarkable there. But what strikes me in retrospect is how my plea for expanding our field of vision prefigured, however faintly, the two most significant calls to action to have appeared in Victorian studies since that time (both of them, as it happens, jointly authored): the Manifesto of the V21 Collective (2015) and “Undisciplining Victorian Studies” (2020), by Ronjaunee Chatterjee, Alicia Mireles Christoff, and Amy R. Wong, which introduced a special issue of Victorian Studies on the same topic.

I say “faintly” because “A Bounded Field” proposed, rather modestly, that Victorian poetry studies should pay more heed to broader literary and artistic contexts, whereas both of the later statements are far more ambitious. The V21 Manifesto, published online by a group of early-career scholars, decries the prevalence in Victorian studies of “positivist historicism,” meaning the accumulation of ever more detailed information and theses about the past. This critical methodology “is enabled by and sustains a situation in which Victorianists are our own and only interlocutors. It fails to imagine paths of argument compelling to scholars who do not care about Victorians as Victorians.”1 The Manifesto therefore calls for post-historicist ways of thinking that will make our field interesting to those outside of it by embracing “theory” (broadly conceived) and “a new openness to presentism.”2 “Undisciplining Victorian Studies,” meanwhile, is at once more narrowly focused and more far-reaching, in that it urges scholars of Victorian literature and culture to reconsider every aspect of their practice. “[O]ur goal is to interrogate and challenge our field’s marked resistance to centering racial logic,” the authors write. “[W]e want to illuminate how race and racial difference subtend our most cherished objects of study, our most familiar historical and theoretical frameworks, our most engrained scholarly protocols, and the very demographics of our field.”3 Both pieces thus call for us...

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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
7
期刊介绍: Founded in 1962 to further the aesthetic study of the poetry of the Victorian Period in Britain (1830–1914), Victorian Poetry publishes articles from a broad range of theoretical and critical angles, including but not confined to new historicism, feminism, and social and cultural issues. The journal has expanded its purview from the major figures of Victorian England (Tennyson, Browning, the Rossettis, etc.) to a wider compass of poets of all classes and gender identifications in nineteenth-century Britain and the Commonwealth. Victorian Poetry is edited by John B. Lamb and sponsored by the Department of English at West Virginia University.
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