Season of Missed Time: Autumnal Aesthetics and Temporality of Suspension in British Romantic Writings (1815 - 1820)
Details
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Version: After imprimatur
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State: Public
Version: After imprimatur
License: Not specified
Serval ID
serval:BIB_04192CD0B918
Type
A Master's thesis.
Publication sub-type
Master (thesis) (master)
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Season of Missed Time: Autumnal Aesthetics and Temporality of Suspension in British Romantic Writings (1815 - 1820)
Director(s)
Swift Simon
Institution details
Université de Genève
Publication state
Accepted
Issued date
04/10/2022
Genre
Mémoire de Master
Language
english
Abstract
Résumé
This study demonstrates that, for British Romantic authors writing in the 1815 – 1820 period, autumn—with its frequently nebulous weather, its variated atmospheric aesthetics, and its cultural clout as the season of both fruitfulness and decay—was an apt aesthetico-temporal trope to represent the tempestuous climate—or spirit—of their age. I argue that Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1818), Jane Austen's Persuasion (1818), and John Keats's To Autumn (1820) depict autumn as the season of missed time: an interval during which Victor Frankenstein, Anne Elliot, and Keats's speaker find themselves in states of melancholy suspension in time and space, which is generative, at worse, of paralyzing and alienating perplexity, and, at best, of alleviating and grounding sensoriality in the here-and-now. The autumnal aesthetics and temporality of the three texts, I suggest, represent Shelley's, Austen's, and Keats's literary engagement with, and response to the temporality of acceleration and contingency, as well as the climate of elusiveness and uncertainty of the age 1815 – 1820.
This study demonstrates that, for British Romantic authors writing in the 1815 – 1820 period, autumn—with its frequently nebulous weather, its variated atmospheric aesthetics, and its cultural clout as the season of both fruitfulness and decay—was an apt aesthetico-temporal trope to represent the tempestuous climate—or spirit—of their age. I argue that Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1818), Jane Austen's Persuasion (1818), and John Keats's To Autumn (1820) depict autumn as the season of missed time: an interval during which Victor Frankenstein, Anne Elliot, and Keats's speaker find themselves in states of melancholy suspension in time and space, which is generative, at worse, of paralyzing and alienating perplexity, and, at best, of alleviating and grounding sensoriality in the here-and-now. The autumnal aesthetics and temporality of the three texts, I suggest, represent Shelley's, Austen's, and Keats's literary engagement with, and response to the temporality of acceleration and contingency, as well as the climate of elusiveness and uncertainty of the age 1815 – 1820.
Keywords
English literature, Romantic literature, Romanticism, British Romanticism, Mary Shelley, Jane Austen, John Keats, Frankenstein, Persuasion, To Autumn, Literary criticism, Aesthetics, Environmental aesthetics, Ecocriticism, New Historicism, Philosophy, Phenomenology, Time, Temporality, History, Regency Era, 19th century, Long eighteenth century, Picturesque, Sublime, Melancholy, Novel, Lyric poetry, Suspension
Open Access
Yes
Create date
15/09/2023 13:42
Last modification date
15/09/2023 13:51