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Wilkie Collins’in Beyazlı Kadın Başlıklı Romanının Oküler Poetikası

Year 2024, Issue: Special Issue: Wilkie Collins, 21 - 31, 28.01.2024
https://doi.org/10.47777/cankujhss.1373096

Abstract

Bu makalenin amacı, Wilkie Collins’in Beyazlı Kadın başlıklı romanında görmenin ve gözün oynadığı kritik rolü irdelemek ve bu tartışmayı on dokuzuncu yüzyılın göze/görmeye dair oküler dinamikleri ve sansasyon romanının jenerik özellikleri bağlamına yerleştirmektir. Collins’in görmek ve bilmek edimleri arasında kurduğu kavramsal eşdeğerlik, iktidar ilişkilerinin görme/göz üzerinden nasıl işlediği dikkate alınarak tartışılacaktır. Dolayısıyla, Beyazlı Kadın’ın skopik unsurları tarihsel ve teorik bağlama yerleştirilerek mercek altına alınacak, romanın görünürlük ve görünmezlik halleriyle örülü semiosferi görme ve oküler iktidar arasındaki dinamik ilişkiyle şekillenen bir etkileşim ve çatışma alanı olarak okunacaktır.

References

  • Bal, M. (2009). Narratology: Introduction to the Theory of Narrative. University of Toronto Press.
  • Berger, J. (1977). Ways of Seeing. Penguin Books.
  • Christ, C. T. and Jordan, J. O. (1995). Introduction. In C. T. Christ & J. O. Jordan (Eds.), Victorian Literature and the Victorian Visual Imagination (pp. xix-xxix). University of Carolina Press.
  • Collins, W. (2005). The Woman in White. Pocket Books.
  • Crary, J. (1992). Techniques of the Observer: On Vision and Modernity in the Nineteenth Century. October Books.
  • Dolin, T. (2006). Collins’s Career and the Visual Arts. In J. N. Taylor (Ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Wilkie Collins (pp. 7-22). Cambridge University Press.
  • Flint, K. (2000). The Victorians and the Visual Imagination. Cambridge University Press.
  • Foster, H. (1988). Preface. In H. Foster (Ed.), Vision and Visuality (pp. ix-xiv). Bay Press.
  • Garrison, L. (2009). Seductive Visual Studies: Scientific Focus and Editorial Control in The Woman in White and All the Year Round. In L. Brake & M. Demoor (Eds.), The Lure of Illustration in the Nineteenth Century: Picture and Press (pp. 168-183). Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Goldhill, S. (1996). Refracting Classical Vision: Changing Cultures of Viewing. In T. Brennan & M. Jay (Eds.), Vision in Context: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives on Sight (pp. 16-28). Routledge.
  • Heidegger, M. (Winter 1976). The Age of the World View. Trans. Marjorie Grene. Boundary, 4 (2)340-355.
  • Irvin, D. (2009). Image-Texts in The Woman in White. Rocky Mountain Review, 63 (2), 225-232.
  • Jahn, M. (1996). Windows of Focalization: Deconstructing and Reconstructing a Narratological Concept. Style, 30 (2), 241-267.
  • Jay, M. (1988). Scopic Regimes of Modernity. In H. Foster (Ed.), Vision and Visuality (pp. 3-23). Bay Press.
  • Manguel, A. (2000). Reading Pictures. Random House Publishing Group.
  • Meisel, M. (1983). Realizations: Narrative, Pictorial, and Theatrical Arts in Nineteenth-Century England. Princeton University Press.
  • Natasha, A. (2023). Blood and Footprints: Traces of Embodiment in Jude the Obscure and The Woman in White. English Studies, 104 (4), 589-611.
  • Pykett, L. (2006). Collins and the Sensation Novel. In J. B. Taylor (Ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Wilkie Collins (pp. 50-64). Cambridge University Press.
  • Rajchman, J. (1988). Foucault’s Art of Seeing. October, 44, 88-117.
  • Sontag, S. (1999). The Image-World. In J. Evans & S. Hall (Eds.), Visual Culture: A Reader (pp. 80-94). Sage Publications.
  • Thomas, R. (1995). Making Darkness Visible: Capturing the Criminal and Observing the Law in Victorian Photography and Detective Fiction. In. C. T. Christ & J. O. Jordan (Eds.), Victorian Literature and the Victorian Visual Imagination (pp.134-168). University of Carolina Press.
  • Unsigned Review. (2005a). Wilkie Collins: The Critical Heritage. Ed. Norman Page. Routledge. 85.
  • Unsigned Review. (2005b). Wilkie Collins: The Critical Heritage. Ed. Norman Page. Routledge. 87.

Ocular Poetics of Wilkie Collins’s The Woman in White

Year 2024, Issue: Special Issue: Wilkie Collins, 21 - 31, 28.01.2024
https://doi.org/10.47777/cankujhss.1373096

Abstract

The aim of this article is to explore the critical role of vision and act of seeing in the poetics of Wilkie Collins’s The Woman in White in the context of the ocular dynamics of the nineteenth-century in general and the generic markers of the sensation novel in particular. The conceptual equivalence Collins builds between the agencies of seeing and knowing will be explored by paying particular attention to the ways in which power is exercised on the axis of the modality of the visual. Taking visibility and invisibility as the controlling agencies in The Woman in White, the discussion will focus on exploring the scopic aspects of the novel in its historical and theoretical context, and reading the semiosphere of the novel as a dynamic space of interaction between and vision and ocular power.

References

  • Bal, M. (2009). Narratology: Introduction to the Theory of Narrative. University of Toronto Press.
  • Berger, J. (1977). Ways of Seeing. Penguin Books.
  • Christ, C. T. and Jordan, J. O. (1995). Introduction. In C. T. Christ & J. O. Jordan (Eds.), Victorian Literature and the Victorian Visual Imagination (pp. xix-xxix). University of Carolina Press.
  • Collins, W. (2005). The Woman in White. Pocket Books.
  • Crary, J. (1992). Techniques of the Observer: On Vision and Modernity in the Nineteenth Century. October Books.
  • Dolin, T. (2006). Collins’s Career and the Visual Arts. In J. N. Taylor (Ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Wilkie Collins (pp. 7-22). Cambridge University Press.
  • Flint, K. (2000). The Victorians and the Visual Imagination. Cambridge University Press.
  • Foster, H. (1988). Preface. In H. Foster (Ed.), Vision and Visuality (pp. ix-xiv). Bay Press.
  • Garrison, L. (2009). Seductive Visual Studies: Scientific Focus and Editorial Control in The Woman in White and All the Year Round. In L. Brake & M. Demoor (Eds.), The Lure of Illustration in the Nineteenth Century: Picture and Press (pp. 168-183). Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Goldhill, S. (1996). Refracting Classical Vision: Changing Cultures of Viewing. In T. Brennan & M. Jay (Eds.), Vision in Context: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives on Sight (pp. 16-28). Routledge.
  • Heidegger, M. (Winter 1976). The Age of the World View. Trans. Marjorie Grene. Boundary, 4 (2)340-355.
  • Irvin, D. (2009). Image-Texts in The Woman in White. Rocky Mountain Review, 63 (2), 225-232.
  • Jahn, M. (1996). Windows of Focalization: Deconstructing and Reconstructing a Narratological Concept. Style, 30 (2), 241-267.
  • Jay, M. (1988). Scopic Regimes of Modernity. In H. Foster (Ed.), Vision and Visuality (pp. 3-23). Bay Press.
  • Manguel, A. (2000). Reading Pictures. Random House Publishing Group.
  • Meisel, M. (1983). Realizations: Narrative, Pictorial, and Theatrical Arts in Nineteenth-Century England. Princeton University Press.
  • Natasha, A. (2023). Blood and Footprints: Traces of Embodiment in Jude the Obscure and The Woman in White. English Studies, 104 (4), 589-611.
  • Pykett, L. (2006). Collins and the Sensation Novel. In J. B. Taylor (Ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Wilkie Collins (pp. 50-64). Cambridge University Press.
  • Rajchman, J. (1988). Foucault’s Art of Seeing. October, 44, 88-117.
  • Sontag, S. (1999). The Image-World. In J. Evans & S. Hall (Eds.), Visual Culture: A Reader (pp. 80-94). Sage Publications.
  • Thomas, R. (1995). Making Darkness Visible: Capturing the Criminal and Observing the Law in Victorian Photography and Detective Fiction. In. C. T. Christ & J. O. Jordan (Eds.), Victorian Literature and the Victorian Visual Imagination (pp.134-168). University of Carolina Press.
  • Unsigned Review. (2005a). Wilkie Collins: The Critical Heritage. Ed. Norman Page. Routledge. 85.
  • Unsigned Review. (2005b). Wilkie Collins: The Critical Heritage. Ed. Norman Page. Routledge. 87.
There are 23 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Subjects Literary Studies (Other)
Journal Section Articles
Authors

Gülden Hatipoğlu 0000-0001-6792-1427

Early Pub Date January 22, 2024
Publication Date January 28, 2024
Published in Issue Year 2024 Issue: Special Issue: Wilkie Collins

Cite

APA Hatipoğlu, G. (2024). Ocular Poetics of Wilkie Collins’s The Woman in White. Cankaya University Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences(Special Issue: Wilkie Collins), 21-31. https://doi.org/10.47777/cankujhss.1373096

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