The Victorians and the Visual Imagination

The Victorians and the Visual Imagination is an exciting and innovative exploration of the Victorians’ attitudes towards sight. Tantalised by physiologists who proved the unreliability of the eye, intrigued by the role of subjectivity within vision, and provoked by new technologies of spectatorship, the Victorians were also imaginatively stirred by the sense of a world which lay just out of human sight. This interdisciplinary study draws on writers as diverse as George Eliot, Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Rudyard Kipling as well as pre-Raphaelite and realist painters including Millais, Burne-Jones, William Powell Frith and Whistler, and a host of Victorian scientists, cultural commentators and art critics. Its topics include blindness, the location of memory, hallucination, dust, and the importance of the horizon - a dazzling eclectic range of subjects linked together by the operations of the eye and brain.

• Combines Victorian literature, art and science ensuring a wide appeal • Richly illustrated with over 70 half-tones • Lively, accessible style, written by an author who has published extensively on Victorian and twentieth-century fiction, painting and cultural history

Contents

1. The visible and the unseen; 2. ‘The mote within the eye’; 3. Blindness and insight; 4. Lifting the veil; 5. Under the ice; 6. The buried city; 7. The role of the art critic; 8. Criticism, language and narrative; 9. Surface and depth; 10. Hallucination and vision; Conclusion: the Victorian horizon.

Prize Winner

Rose Mary Crawshay Prize - Winner

Review

‘This book is a quite magnificent contribution to nineteenth-century cultural history, as well as to the wider exploration of the cultural production of the senses. Flint moves with restless, virtuosic authority between literature, painting, politics and scientific writing, layering together gripping new material with reangled readings of familiar texts.’ Steven Connor, Birkbeck College, University of London