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Love Stories: The Discourses of Desire in Literature and Culture, 1800 – the Present. Session Two. Agenda. Summary of Session One Theorising and historicising desire: Catherine Belsey Tennyson, ”The Lady of Shalott”. Happy Valentine’s Day !!!.
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Love Stories: The Discourses of Desire in Literature and Culture, 1800 – the Present Session Two
Agenda • Summary of Session One • Theorising and historicising desire: Catherine Belsey • Tennyson, ”The Lady of Shalott”
Happy Valentine’s Day !!! • “For this was on seynt Volantynys day / Whan euery bryd comyth there to chese his make.” (Parlement of Foules) • "Tomorrow is Saint Valentine's Day." (Hamlet) • ” […] So now you're gone / And I was wrong / I never knew what it was like/ To be alone […]” (Linkin Park ”Valentine’s Day”)
Love is a quotation • ”Every other night on TV someone says ’I love you’” (Rolan Barthes) • Postmodern declarations of love: ”I love you as they say in the movies” (Umberto Eco)
A Summary of Session One: 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: 900/ 952)
A Summary of Session One Love = the desire or longing for merging or uniting with an other, • But union and fusion = death, i.e. the end of longing, • So merging, uniting and fusing with the other is staged as an impossibility
A Summary of Session One • Love is the love of love • Love concerns that which threatens or prevents love: physical, social, pyschological obstacles
A Summary of Session One ”La Belle Dame Sans Merci” • The knight and the elfish lady: love is magic (enthralment, enrapture, captivation, fascination, charm) • The narrator and the knight-but-not-quite • The reader and Keat’s odd poem (ballad metre and frame structure)
Jean-Baptiste Greuze, Lady Reading the Letters of Heloise and Abelard (1758-1759)
Theorising Desire – According to Catherine Belsey. ”Reading Love Stories” Two key assumptions of romance: • Human beings are divided into mind and body • Human beings are incomplete until united with their soul mates
Theorising Desire – According to Catherine Belsey. ”Reading Love Stories” (cont.) • In romances ”true love offers to unify mind and body” (23) • However, romances celebrate ”the elemental otherness of desire as a constituent of true love” (28) in metaphors of the destruction of subjectivity [remember Keats!] • ”True love, then, is not so much a union of mind and body as an alternation of their dominance” (30)
Belsey, ”Adultery in King Arthur’s Court” Arthurian legend: Arthur, Guinevere, Lancelot, Elaine, Mark, Tristam, Iseult, etc. • Stories of adultery and homosocial desire: triangular desire - rivalry
Belsey, ”Adultery in King Arthur’s Court” The literary and cultural history of Arthurian legend: • I: the 12th Century romance. ”Love is passionate, extravagant, agonizing, and obsessional” (108). Love is not related to marriage and family • II. The 15th Century romance. Adultery is tolerated. • III. 19th century romance. Adultery in conflict with moral and spiritual (religious) duty
Romances in the 21st century: King Arthur (2004), Tristan and Iseult (2006)
Tennyson, ”The Lady of Shalott” • Summarise the poem. Find headings for each of the four sections. What’s her situation like? Why does it change? • Pay particular attention to the following: the lady, Camelot, weaving. • What’s the theme of the poem?
John William Waterhouse, 1916”’I Am Half Sick of Shadows’”, Said The Lady of Shalott”