Tuesday, May 13, 2008

New blog

http://cowpersbunny.wordpress.com.

Sunday, February 3, 2008

Meeting with adviser

I met with my adviser last week, and he helped me brainstorm an interesting dissertation topic. I'm currently doing research to see if it's a topic that will pan out. It's difficult to say, from my perspective, because it seems like there are a lot of "trendy" topics right now... So, I can't really be sure what will work out as a strong topic for publication in the future. However, I can say that the topic interests me more than what I had before.

Currently reading:
  • Gabrielle Starr's text on lyricism and the novel
  • Rothstein's System of Inquiry
  • Anti-Pamela
Currently thinking about: detachable conventions in 18C prose fictions.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Ooo-la-la

I've just started rereading Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure by John Cleland, and there are several things I've noticed now that I never noticed before:
  • Many allusions to Pamela, Joseph Andrews, and Shamela
  • Close resemblances to Moll Flanders and Roxana
  • A leit motif of ships and nautical stuff
  • Feigned movements/actions of sentimentalism... the dabbing of tears with hankerchiefs, the head turn of modesty, etc.
It's really tempting to write on this book. REALLY tempting. I seriously need to think about why.

On another note, that may be related, I've started thinking about addressing texts that are capable of shifting affective congruity... Writers intentionally move their readers from becoming emotionally involved with the text to skepticism or laughing against the grain of the characters (oscillating emotional congruity, elisions of sentiment and satire). Some texts that work this:
  • Tristram Shandy
  • A Sentimental Journey
  • Humphrey Clinker
  • Clarissa
  • Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure
  • Tom Jones
  • ...
Does Bowsell do this too? What about anyone else? Do we take this idea for granted? And what happens when reread these texts... do the moments of emotional congruity change or remain the same? Do writers insert new ways of reading the texts for each repetition?

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Odd topics for articles

Writing articles and conference papers may be my only outlet for really strange (or silly) paper ideas:
  • Comets and Astronomical allusions, Defoe, Lady Mary, and the GM
  • Horses, William of Orange, the Irish, and Swift
  • Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go, Akerman's Jeanne Diehlman, bodies, and resignation
  • Wilkie Collins, Charles Dickens and George Eliot, early cinema adaptations, realism, and 19C visual media
  • Amanuenses as objects or subjects???
  • ...
I will keep updating this list... None of you anonymous and random readers better steal my embryonic ideas! They're my babies!!!

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Martinus Scriblerus is a no-no

I just finished rereading Martinus Scriblerus and realized that there is no way I can write an entire chapter on just that alone. This is rather funny, but I thought the text was much heftier because I read it on ECCO in its original, first edition format. I thought the text was at least 150 pages, but it's no more than 70 or so. Ha.

I did rethink the idea of rereading... I am considering a way to expand it into rereading, recreating, and rewriting. I could then examine new editions, sequels, and the 18C fan fiction... This would actually work well with my interests in adaptations and the theoretical spaces created through practices of re-creation.

Hmm... something to mull over after I finish my last course...

Some general texts I'm keeping in mind:
  • The Dunciad
  • Gulliver's Travels
  • Robinson Crusoe
    • Moll Flanders
    • Roxana
  • Pamela
    • Shamela
    • Joseph Andrews
    • Anti-Pamela
  • Clarissa