Victorian Affects

Veranstalter
Dr. Anja Hartl (Innsbruck), Dr. Tim Sommer (Passau/Oxford)
Gefördert durch
Deutscher Anglistenverband
PLZ
94032
Ort
Passau
Land
Deutschland
Findet statt
Digital
Vom - Bis
08.12.2023 - 08.12.2023
Deadline
15.09.2023
Von
Tim Sommer, Universität Passau

Combining literary and cultural studies with cultural and intellectual history, this workshop aims to bring Victorian notions of affect and contemporary theorisations of the affect concept into dialogue with one another. What can affect-oriented criticism contribute to our understanding of Victorianism and its private, social, and “political emotions” (Martha Nussbaum)? What methodological potential does affect theory have for readings of nineteenth-century writing and culture?

Victorian Affects

With its burgeoning interest in materialism, physiology, and the body, Victorian culture can be seen as anticipating contemporary critical formulations of the affect concept (Cohn; Jaffe). Nineteenth-century writers like Alexander Bain (The Emotions and the Will, 1859), George Henry Lewes (Problems of Life and Mind, 1874–79), and Grant Allen (Physiological Aesthetics, 1877) explored the materiality and the somatics of emotions in ways that resonate with contemporary theorisations of affect. Modern affect theory, in turn, has developed an analytical language and a conceptual toolkit which provide, in Elisha Cohn’s words, a “provocative critical vocabulary and approach for Victorian studies” (564).

Commonly defined as a set of pre-linguistic, pre-cognitive, and unconscious physiological intensities capable of moving and connecting bodies, affect has been understood as a force that crosses boundaries between the material and the immaterial as well as the human and the non-human. Located on the threshold between the body and its environment, affective energies “make things matter” (Ngai 54) without determining identity, orientation, or direction.

Whereas the “affective turn” (Clough and Halley) has prompted research in various fields within the humanities and social sciences, Victorianists have only recently begun to explore the potential of affect for the study of nineteenth-century literature and culture. As a series of important book chapters and monographs (see Ablow; Cohen; Dames; Gilbert; Gooch; MacDonald; Morgan; Samalin) as well as a recent cluster of essays in Victorian Studies (64.4, 2022) demonstrate, however, affect is emerging as one of the most exciting subjects in the field.

This workshop aims to bring Victorian notions of affect and contemporary theorisations of the concept into dialogue with one another. We seek to address a number of related questions: What can an affect-oriented criticism contribute to our understanding of Victorianism and its private, social, and “political emotions” (Nussbaum)? What methodological potential does affect theory have for readings of canonical and non-canonical Victorian writing? Conversely, what can the study of Victorian (con-)texts contribute to the critical vocabulary of affect-based literary and cultural criticism?

We are happy to announce that the workshop programme will feature a keynote lecture by Elisha Cohn (https://english.cornell.edu/elisha-cohn). The workshop is supported through funding from Deutscher Anglistenverband e.V.

We welcome contributions which
- investigate Victorian ideas of affect and related concepts (feelings, emotions, etc.)
- look at affect as a theme in, or a feature of, Victorian texts and contexts
- engage affect theory as an approach, methodology, or tool to analyse Victorian literature and culture
- explore overlaps and links between affect theory and other (recent) critical paradigms (new materialism, new formalism, gender and queer theory, animal studies, post- and decolonial studies, ecocriticism, etc.)

Papers may address, but are by no means limited to, topics such as:
- literary representations of affect(s) / writing and affect
- the function of affect in specific literary genres and modes (lyric and narrative poetry, sensation fiction, the social novel, realism, melodrama, etc.)
- the politics of affect
- the role of affect for the constitution of racial, gender, and/or class identity in Victorian literature and culture
- affect and Empire / the affective dimensions of Victorian imperial discourse
- ecocritical perspectives on Victorian affect and nature / the environment
- affect and (Victorian) scientific and disciplinary formations (philosophy, physiology, psychology, etc.)
- Victorian affect(s) and the reading experience / affect and reader-response theory / affect and aesthetic experience / affect and “the physiology of the novel” (Dames)
- affect and (new) materialism

Contributors can opt for one of the following two formats:
- A flashlight presentation of 5–10 minutes which outlines the scope and aims of a research project (such as a PhD thesis, a postdoctoral project, or a collaborative research project) situated in the field of Victorian affect studies, broadly conceived.
- A paper of 15 minutes which focuses on a case study or on specific historical, theoretical, methodological, or didactic aspects of the workshop theme (as outlined above).

Please send your proposal (250 words) and a brief bio note (100–200 words) to Anja Hartl (Anja.Hartl@uibk.ac.at) and Tim Sommer (Tim.Sommer@uni-passau.de) by 15 September 2023. Please also indicate whether you would like to give a flashlight presentation or a paper.

On the DACH Victorianists Network:
DACH Victorianists is a network that brings together scholars from the “D-A-CH” region (Germany, Austria, and Switzerland) whose research and teaching focus on Victorian literature and culture. For more information, see DACH Victorianists online: https://dachvictorianists.blogspot.com.

Works Cited
Ablow, Rachel. “Introduction: The Feeling of Reading.” The Feeling of Reading: Affective Experience and Victorian Literature. Ed. Rachel Ablow. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 2010. 1–10.
Clough, Patricia Ticineto, and Jean Halley, eds. The Affective Turn: Theorizing the Social. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2007.
Cohen, William A. Embodied: Victorian Literature and the Senses. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 2008.
Cohn, Elisha. “Affect.” Victorian Literature and Culture 46.3–4 (2018): 563–67.
Dames, Nicholas. The Physiology of the Novel: Reading, Neural Science, and the Form of Victorian Fiction. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007.
Gilbert, Pamela K. Victorian Skin: Surface, Self, History. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2019.
Gooch, Joshua. Dickensian Affects: Charles Dickens and Feelings of Precarity. New York and London: Routledge, 2020.
Jaffe, Audrey. “Affect and the Victorian Novel.” The Palgrave Handbook of Affect Studies and Textual Criticism. Ed. Donald R. Wehrs and Thomas Blake. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017. 713–33.
MacDonald, Tara. Narrative, Affect and Victorian Sensation: Wilful Bodies. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, forthcoming.
Morgan, Benjamin. The Outward Mind: Materialist Aesthetics in Victorian Science and Literature. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2017.
Ngai, Sianne. Ugly Feelings. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2005.
Nussbaum, Martha. Political Emotions: Why Love Matters for Justice. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2013.
Samalin, Zachary. The Masses Are Revolting: Victorian Culture and the Political Aesthetics of Disgust. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2021.

Kontakt

Dr. Anja Hartl, Innsbruck (Anja.Hartl@uibk.ac.at), Dr. Tim Sommer, Passau/Oxford (Tim.Sommer@uni-passau.de)

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