1 / 35

An Ecological Feminist Revisioning of the Masculinist Sublime

An Ecological Feminist Revisioning of the Masculinist Sublime. Patrick D. Murphy University of Central Florida. Calls for Recovering the Sublime.

magee
Download Presentation

An Ecological Feminist Revisioning of the Masculinist Sublime

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. An Ecological Feminist Revisioning of the Masculinist Sublime Patrick D. Murphy University of Central Florida

  2. Calls for Recovering the Sublime Christopher Hitt, for instance, criticized ecocriticism for its inadequate attention to the sublime, concluding that "Perhaps it is time—while there is still some wild nature left—that we discover an ecological sublime"

  3. Longinus on the Sublime So Longinus makes these key points: the sublime is a rhetorical elevation causing transport, not persuasion, and can be associated with the sacred; it is based on the topic of an object, action, or event worthy of being perceived and depicted as sublime; that topic is universally recognized as sublime so that any audience can be transported by the appropriate representation of this genuine subject; and the elevation felt may include terror, and "mad enthusiasm" that fills "the speaker's words with frenzy" (85).

  4. Cicero, Lucretius, Virgil, Dante

  5. Sublime Mountains and Public Arenas religion, war, and politics, categories dominated by male power elites. Thus mountains as symbols come heavily laden with exclusionary male-only significations Burke aligns the sublime with "feelings for 'kings and commanders' and for God"

  6. English Theorists of the Sublime • Earl of Shaftesbury • John Dennis • Joseph Addison • Edmund Burke

  7. Edmund Burke A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful(1757) As Philip Shaw remarks, "The Burkean sublime, with its emphasis on the psychological effects of terror, proved decisive in shifting the discourse of the sublime away from the study of natural objects and towards the mind of the spectator" (71).

  8. Terror to Pleasure to Domination • Pleasure comes from overcoming a perceived danger that elicited a sense of horror • And that impression of overcoming leads to a sense of triumph and a belief in domination and mastery

  9. “A Safe Distance” and Terror John Pipkin: “the subject must place a safe distance between himself and the terrible object if an experience of sublimity is to be possible.”

  10. From Natural Objects to the Human Mind Philip Shaw: “The Burkean sublime, with its emphasis on the psychological effects of terror, proved decisive in shifting the discourse of the sbulime away from the study of natural objects and towards the mind of the spectator.”

  11. Percy Bysshe Shelley, “Mont Blanc”

  12. John Muir • “A New View of the High Sierra”

  13. Burkean Misogyny • As Pipkin argues, for Burke beauty is also the sign of weakness inscribed on women's bodies. . . . Since the strong passions of the sublime are beyond the limits of female experience, Burke's formulation ensures that a woman can seek her own self-preservation only by relying upon the sublimity of her husband. . . . • But while beauty makes women attractive to their sublime husbands, it also poses a great threat to male autonomy. . . . The beauty of the female body threatens male self-preservation because it undermines the disinterestedness required for the pursuit of the sublime.

  14. Immanuel KantThe Critique of Judgment, 1724-1804 1790

  15. Who has Dominion? Dominion in my sense here would refer to the kind of regulation and control that is established by the processes of ecosystems, the larger cycles of the biosphere, the influences of genetics on our individual bodies, and those bodies' continuous mutually sustaining interactions with a host of other living organisms.

  16. Kant’s Mental World • Men • Active • Dominant • Sublime • “a masculinized experience of empowerment“--Mellor • Women • Passive • Submissive • Beautiful • “a feminized experience of nurturing and sensuous love”--Mellor

  17. Kant’s view of Women and the Sublime “For Kant, then, a woman who pursues the heights of the sublime actually deprives herself of her only access to it because the only ‘feminine” sublime is a vicarious one.” --Pipkin

  18. Anne K. Mellor Female Gothic Feminine Sublime • "the female Gothic domesticates the sublime as paternal transgression" • "the feminine sublime" positively portrays the sublime as a democratic engagement that "can produce a sympathy or love that connects the self with other people”

  19. Patricia Yaeger and Barbara Claire Freeman • Patricia Yaeger defined a "maternal sublime" in her 1992 essay, "The 'Language of Blood': Toward a Maternal Sublime." • Barbara Claire Freeman • The Feminine Sublime: Gender and Excess in Women's Fiction(1995)

  20. Barbara Gates The "Victorian female sublime" is just one of the writing strategies that Barbara Gates explores in her broadly ranging study of Romantic, Victorian, and Edwardian women, Kindred Nature.

  21. Inhabitation, Home, and Sublime What is so significant here is the point that instead of emphasizing distance through alienation by having extreme experiences in uninhabitable locations, as eighteenth- and nineteenth-century male writers sought to do, these women emphasized shared and common experiences in inhabitable locations that become home. Rather than being out there somewhere, nature for these women writers and their literary characters was right here and right now.

  22. James Kirwan “this complex—involving the entertainment of a feeling of transcending mundane limits, the projection of our 'greatness' onto an external object, and the subjective perception of the pleasure as devoid of self-interest—is not a response to the sublime but rather constitutes the sublime, the experience of sublimity”

  23. For the Sublime to have Positive Effects for the sublime to have any potentially positive effects in terms of human perceptions of their place in the world, their responsibilities toward other entities with which they share the planet, their treatment of a particular biosphere or habitat requires an interpretation of this intuition or emotion on the basis of an ideological position that must necessarily exist beyond the confines of the sublime.

  24. Two Romanticist Ecocritics Karl Kroeber Jonathan Bate • With his sister, Ursula K. Le Guin

  25. Byron’s Cain According to Kroeber, “Cain rejects Lucifer’s preference for sublimity over beauty” “the displeasure of Lucifer, whose liking for the masculinely sexist Burkean sublime fits snugly into this ethic of abstract universalizing, his desire to separate intellectuality from sensory experience”

  26. Bate on Wordsworth and Sublime Wordsworth sees consciousness as part of nature, with the result that the increasing sensitivity and awareness generated by a moment of sublime intensity does not carry a person from external nature to internal mind but links the two.

  27. Bate on John Clare “For Clare, as for Bachelard . . . , the interior order of the human mind is inextricable from the environmental space which we inhabit. Sanity depends upon grounding in place. But is also depends upon grounding in time.”

  28. Stonum and Dickinson Gary Lee Stonum:"Dickinson's poetry takes the established patterns of the romantic sublime and gives them an additional twist, one which works to circumvent the otherwise deep complicity between sublimity and mastery" part of Dickinson's "quest for a more than human wholeness of being"

  29. Mary Oliver

  30. Mary Wollstonecraft "She frames the complex web of identity and difference that flows between her environment and her self as a dynamic in which mind and world are interdependent"

  31. An Integrational Sublime Patricipatory Sublime Integrational Sublime Transcendental Sublime

  32. Other Terms than Sublime • liminescence (a sensation of in-betweenness) • or transport (being carried beyond the threshhold of ego-identity) • or even attendance (a sense of engagement without a sense of distance)

  33. Nondominational Rhetoric • invitational rhetoric • heterarchicaldialogue aligned with efforts to perceive other parts of the biotic community as speaking subjects.

  34. Carolyn Merchant and Me

  35. Thank You!

More Related