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Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture Love Stories: Narrative Discourses of Desire 1800 – the Present Session Two.

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Presentation on theme: "Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture Love Stories: Narrative Discourses of Desire 1800 – the Present Session Two."— Presentation transcript:

1 Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture Love Stories: Narrative Discourses of Desire 1800 – the Present Session Two

2 Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture Agenda Recap Peter Brooks, ”Reading for the Plot” Loving, Telling, and Reading with Special Reference to John Keats Romanticism and its adaptations

3 Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture Recap Brooks: Desire propels narrative Bersani: Narrative contains desire Happy love has no history: love stories concern that which threatens or prevents love Desire is triangular: love stories concern relationships between lover, beloved and an antagonist Desire is intertextual: love stories concern love as simulation, copy, quotation.

4 Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture Peter Brooks, ”Reading for the Plot” Narrative’s omnipresence as a basic sense making activity (4) ”Plot is the principle of interconnectedness and intention…” (5) ”…the logic of narrative discourse, the organizing dynamic of a specific mode of human understanding.” (7) ”Plot … is the logic and dynamic of narrative, and narrative itself a form of understanding and explanation.” (10)

5 Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture Peter Brooks, ”Reading for the Plot” Terminology: –Fabula – sjuzet –Histoire – recit –Story – plot –Events – story –Story – plot – discourse

6 Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture Peter Brooks, ”Reading for the Plot” Roland Barthes’ notion of codes: The proairetic code: the code of actions The hermeneutic code: the code of enigmas and answers

7 Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture John Keats and Fanny Brawne

8 Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture Loving, Telling, and Reading with Special Reference to John Keats’ ”To Fanny Brawne” ”You cannot conceive how I ache to be with you: how I would die for one hour – for what is in the world? I say you cannot conceive; it is impossible you should look with such eyes upon me as I have upon you: it cannot be” (NE2: 952)

9 Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture Loving, Telling, and Reading with Special Reference to John Keats’ ”To Fanny Brawne” Love = the lover’s desire for unity with his beloved and the lover’s knowledge that unity is impossible A lack of reciprocity Lover not a worthy love object: ”I cannot be admired, I am not a thing to be admired” (953)

10 Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture Loving, Telling, and Reading with Special Reference to John Keats’ ”To Fanny Brawne” ”I will imagine you Venus tonight and pray, pray, pray to your star like a Hethen” (953)

11 Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture Loving, Telling, and Reading with Special Reference to John Keats’ ”To Fanny Brawne” ”I will imagine you Venus tonight and pray, pray, pray to your star like a Hethen” (953) Love creates its own obstacles: Venus

12 Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture Loving, Telling, and Reading with Special Reference to John Keats’ ”To Fanny Brawne” ”I have two luxuries to brood over in my walks, your Loveliness and the hour of my death. O that I could have possession of them both in the same minute” (NE2: 953)

13 Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture Loving, Telling, and Reading with Special Reference to John Keats’ ”To Fanny Brawne” ”I have two luxuries to brood over in my walks, your Loveliness and the hour of my death. O that I could have possession of them both in the same minute” (NE2: 953) The end of love (consumation, unity) is the death of love

14 Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture Loving with Special Reference to John Keats’ ”La Belle Dame Sans Merci” Unification revisited: What happens to the knight?

15 Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture Loving, Telling, and Reading with Special Reference to John Keats’ ”La Belle Dame Sans Merci” The frame story: the knight and his interlocutor The framed story: the knight and the lady The poem and its reader: the frame structure; the literary ballad

16 Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture John William Waterhouse

17 Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture Frank Cadogan Cowper

18 Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture

19 Henri Gervex, Rolla (1878)

20 Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture Adaptations Germaine Dulac (1920) Hidetoshi Oneda (2005)

21 Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture Introduction: the Aims and Purposes of the Seminar 1st and 2nd semesters: the analysis and history of texts 3rd and 4th semesters: literary theory and methodology 4th semester: seminars 4th semester: literary and media studies project

22 Jens Kirk, Dept. of Languages and Culture Introduction: the Aims and Purposes of the Seminar Texts – the analysis, history, and theory of a ”genre” – the love story – across the media and genres, but focussing on narrative and writing Culture(s) – the idea of love across cultural and historical periods: Romanticism, Victorianism, Modernism, Postmodernism


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