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Anne Radcliffe

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Most important feature: Ut pictura poesis. Imitation of painting with words. ... Picturesque common people, scenery, and circumstances Srcadic stmospheres. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Anne Radcliffe


1
Anne Radcliffe
  • The Italian

2
Anne Radcliffe
  • A bestselling author
  • Combined three successful trends
  • The fantastic
  • Travel literature
  • Landscape painting through words
  • Had never seen Italy. Based her representation on
    landscape painting and travel literature
  • Widely influential
  • Byron in his representation of Venice. Ruskin.
    James.
  • Many poets borrowed poetic phrases and techinques
    fron her
  • Most Romantic travellers saw Italy through the
    lens of her descriptions

3
The Italian A Gothic Romance
  • Gothic
  • Sublime circumstances Terror and suspense (but,
    on the whole, only isolated episodes)
  • Persecution of innocent victims (E. and V.).
  • Mock-medieval setting, ruins
  • Imprisonment, claustrophobic situations
  • Seemingly Supernatural events
  • Villains, Mysterious, satanic characters
  • Romance
  • Improbable situations
  • Flat characters (types)
  • The victimized innocent girl
  • The villain
  • Poetic prose
  • Emotion, fantasy
  • Disguises, Mistaken identities, Recognitions
    (anagnoresis), Coincidences
  • Mysteries, suspense

4
Typical Plot
  • Coleridges parody A Baron or Baroness ignorant
    of their Birth, and in some dependent situation
    a Castle or a Rock a Sepulchre at some
    distance from the Rock Deserted Rooms
    Underground Passages Pictures a Ghost, so
    believed or a written record blood on it! A
    wonderful Cut-throat (Letter to Wordsworth)
  • Leslie Fiedler Girl escapes and is caught,
    escapes and is caught like a nightmare from
    which it is impossible to wake (Love and Death
    in American Literature)
  • Model Angelica in Orlando Furioso

5
Importance of Landscape
  • Stands in awe of nature, perceived as powerful
    and mysterious
  • Landscape is the protagonist of the romance
  • Human figures, as suggested by Gilpin or in
    Salvator Rosas paintings, complete the scenery
    but to not dominate it.
  • Most human figures static. Do not develop
  • Plots too intricate to remain impressed
  • Her landscapes correspond to the taste of the day
  • Models Rosa, Claude, Poussin, Richard Wolson
  • Aesthetic canons of the Sublime, the Picturesque
    and the Beautiful

6
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7
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8
Nicolas Poussin
9
Claude Lorrain
10
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11
Travel Narrative
  • 2/3 of the text, on the road, away from home
  • Abduction, flights, pursuits
  • Substitutes the dynamics of travel / escape to
    the dynamics of courtship of the realistic
    tradition.
  • A device to send maidens on distant and exciting
    journeys without offending the proprieties
    (Moers, 126). A feminine substitute for the
    picaresque.
  • masculine picaresque vs feminine picturesque)
  • Gilpins picturesque travel in pursuit of an
    object becomes in Radcliffe pursuit of a sexual
    object.. A metaphor.
  • A picturesque and pictorial travel Characters
    make their way from canvas to canvas. Cinematic
    technique.

12
Word painting
  • Most important feature Ut pictura poesis.
    Imitation of painting with words. Landscape is
    the principal character of the novel
  • Imitates landscape painters (vedutismo) Poussin,
    Claude Lorrain, Salvator Rosa
  • Called the Salvator Rosa of British novelists
  • Creates a marvellous Italy (without having seen
    it) from paintings, theatre backdrops and travel
    books --the Italy the Romantic poets and future
    writers will describe
  • Direct line RadcliffeByronRuskinJames.
  • Puts Gilpins theories into practice.

13
Italian Clichés in Ann Radcliffes The Italian
  • Love story
  • Music
  • Italy as source of horrifying otherness
  • The Italy of Early modern theatre.
  • Fearful but sublime circumstances (manifestations
    of the alien nature of Italy)
  • Italy as land of the physical Sublime The Italy
    of Eighteenth cent. Painting
  • Sublime settings (ruins, mountains)
  • Italy and the picturesque
  • Picturesque common people, scenery, and
    circumstances Srcadic stmospheres.

14
Italy as source of horrifying otherness
  • Machiavellian characters
  • Schedoni
  • Spalatro
  • The marchesa
  • Forces of oppression and containment
  • convent discipline,
  • Inquisition,
  • patriarchal families
  • Intrigues, poison

15
Italy as Land of the Sublime and the Picturesque
  • Sublime settings
  • ruins,
  • Mountains
  • The Vesuvius
  • Sublime circumstances (manifestations of the
    alien nature of Italy)
  • Picturesque common people, scenery, and
    circumstances
  • Music

16
The Love Story
  • Falling in love in church (like Petrarch with
    Laura) Ch. 1,p.9
  • Love at first sight ("amor che a cor gentil ratto
    s'apprende")
  • Window / garden scene scene.Ellena pronounces his
    name p.17 Ch. II, p. 34
  • Cf. Romeo and Juliet
  • Love access to Paradise Ch. II, p. 35.
  • V. is like a knight of chivalry ch. 11, 141)
  • Meeting again in convent (ch. 11, 139)

17
Italian Clichés in Ann Radcliffes The Italian
  • Love story
  • Music
  • Italy as source of horrifying otherness
  • The Italy of Early modern theatre.
  • Fearful but sublime circumstances (manifestations
    of the alien nature of Italy)
  • Italy as land of the physical Sublime The Italy
    of Eighteenth cent. Painting
  • Sublime settings (ruins, mountains)
  • Italy and the picturesque
  • Picturesque common people, scenery, and
    circumstances Srcadic stmospheres.
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