Picturing the Language of Images
Picturing the Language of Images. Eds. Nancy Pedri and Laurence Petit. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. 2013.
Picturing the Language of Images brings together established and emerging scholars from around the world to provide a broad exploration of the complex interaction between the verbal and the visual in a variety of media (such as literature, painting, photography, film, and comics, to name but a few) and across time (from the 18th century to the 21st century). These criticsâcoming from backgrounds as diverse as literature, art history, book design, and the visual artsâdraw on different methodologies and reading practices to inform their applied analysis of the interplay of words and images in multimodal texts and artefacts.
The book is comprised of 34 essays and divided into 9 sections of 3 or 4 articles that examine and challenge the relationships between texts and images from either a historical, cultural, theoretical, or generic perspective. The sections are:
- Verbal and Visual Literacy
- Iconotextuality and the Limits of Representation
- Ekphrastic Strategies
- Graphic and Illustrative Strategies
- Text and Image in Visual Art
- Photography in Fiction
- Poetry and / of the Visual
- The Language of Film
- The Language of Comics
Table of Contents
List of Figures xi
Introduction 1
Part I: Verbal and Visual Literacy
From Intersemiotic to Intermedial Transposition: âEx-changing Image into Word / Word into Imageâ 13
LILIAN LOUVEL, UniversitĂŠ de Poitiers, France
The Order of Knowing: Discourse on Aesthetics and the Language of Vision 33
JACOB BODWAY, State University of New York at Buffalo, USA
Ecoutez-Voir, by Elsa Triolet: Situating an âIconotextâ 45
JEAN-PIERRE MONTIER, UniversitĂŠ Rennes II, France
Part II: Iconotextuality and the Limits of Representation
âA Story in Geometric Shapesâ: The Cross between Text and Image in âThe Kissâ by Angela Carter 63
PASCALE TOLLANCE, UniversitĂŠ Lille III, France
Tableaux Vivants or Nature Morte? On Descriptions of Tableaux in Goetheâs Elective Affinities 73
JOANA KONOVA, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
The Quest for the âThing Itselfâ in A. S. Byattâs Still Life 87
EMILIE BOURDAROT, UniversitĂŠ Paris VII, France
Part III: Ekphrastic Strategies
Walter Scottâs Politics of Ekphrasis in Waverley 101
ANNE-LAURE FORTIN-TOURNĂS, UniversitĂŠ Lille II, France
Written on Flesh: Peter Verhelstâs Tonguecat and the Ekphrastic Tradition 111
KIM GORUS, Vrije Universiteit Brussels, Belgium
âSound Apples, Fair Flesh, and Sunlightâ: A. S. Byattâs Feminist Critique of Matisseâs Depictions of Women 119
SARAH GARDAM, DREW UNIVERSITY, USA
âLots of Little Lies for the Sake of One Big Truthâ: Ekphrasis and Memory in John Banvilleâs The Sea and W. G. Sebaldâs The Emigrants 133
SEAN MCGLADE, The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art, USA
Part IV: Graphic and Illustrative Strategies
âAs a Kind of Picture-Writingâ: Walter Crane, Drawing, and the Creation of a New Symbolic System 147
FRANCESCA TANCINI, UniversitĂ degli studi di Siena, Italy
âNot Wavingâ: Miscommunication Between Stevie Smithâs Poems and Drawings 163
KRISTEN MARANGONI, Bob Jones University, USA
Photo-Graphic Devices in Jonathan Safran Foerâs Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close 177
ZOĂ SADOKIERSKI, The University of Technology, Australia
The Shape of Trauma: Two 9/11 Novels 199
ELIZABETH ROSEN, Lafayette College, USA
Part V: Text and Image in Visual Art
Body, Text, and Image in Tatana Kellnerâs Fifty Years of Silence 217
CHRISTA BAIADA, City University of New York, USA
Disrupting the Visual: The Dialogical Relation of Text and Image in Lorna Simpsonâs Photographs 229
CLAUDINE ARMAND, UniversitĂŠ Nancy II, France
Parergon, Paratext, and Title in the Context of Visual Art 241
MIKKO PIRINEN, University of Jyväskylä, Finland
The Interartistic Phenomenon in the âCatalonian Gardenâ 251
VASSILENA KOLAROVA, Independent Scholar
Part VI: Photography in Fiction
Archeology of the Image: Photographic Traces and the Postmodern Archival Text 273
KAREN JACOBS, University of Colorado at Boulder, USA
No Reality Here: Sensation Novels and Photography 297
ELIZABETH ANDERMAN, University of Colorado at Boulder, USA
Nonnarrative Structure and Photographic Images in W. G. Sebaldâs The Emigrants 313
JâLYN CHAPMAN, University of Denver, USA
Mute Images: The Photography of Melancholy in W. G. Sebaldâs The Rings of Saturn 327
ISABELLE GADOIN, UniversitĂŠ de Poitiers, France
Part VII: Poetry and / of the Visual
âA Charming Pictureâ: Photographic Images of Holocaust Perpetrators 345
AIMEE POZORSKI, Central Connecticut State University, USA
The âMagical Bishopâ of Dada: Hugo Ball and âThe Inner Alchemy of the Wordâ 355
TAHIA THADDEUS KAMP, Yale University, USA
Re-reading Blakeâs âLondonâ 367
G. A. ROSSO, Southern Connecticut State University, USA
âShut from Viewâ: Pre-Raphaelite Painting and the Invisible in Keatsâs Isabella; or, The Pot of Basil 381
FANNY GILLET, UniversitĂŠ Toulouse II-Le Mirail, France
Part VIII: The Language of Film
Diegetic Frames and Photo-Cinematographic Seduction: Filming through Text in Harold Fredericâs Illumination (1896) 395
ROBERT MACHADO, City University of New York, USA
From Remake to Remote: Tex Averyâs Fairy Tales 419
PIERRE FLOQUET, UniversitĂŠ de Bordeaux, France
The Fading Art of Video and Loss of Memory: Michael Hanekeâs CachĂŠ and Amour 433
KAREN A. RITZENHOFF, Central Connecticut State University, USA
Part IX: The Language of Comics
Rendering the Familiar Unfamiliar: Art Spiegelmanâs Maus 455
NANCY PEDRI, ĐÓ°É´ŤĂ˝, Canada
All About 9/11, All But 9/11: The Shifting Epistemological Paradigm of Art Spiegelmanâs In the Shadow of No Towers 471
MARTĂN URDIALES SHAW, University of Vigo, Spain
FONK! HONK! WHAM! OOF! Representation of Events in Carl Barks â And in the Aesthetics of Comics in General 483
FREDERIK STJERNFELT AND SVEND ĂSTERGAARD, Aarhus University, Denmark
The Silence of Images: Traces and Effacement in the French Graphic Novel Adaptation of Bohumil Hrabalâs Too Loud a Solitude 509
PASCAL BATAILLARD, UniversitÊ Lumière-Lyon II, France
Contributors 529
Index 539