Reading Jean Rhys : empire, modernism and the politics of the visual

This thesis considers the relationship between literary modernism and visual culture in the work of Caribbean modernist Jean Rhys. Through analysis of a range of visual modes—theatre, fashion, visual art, cinema and exhibition culture—it examines the racialised sexual politics of Rhys’s modernist ae...

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Main Author: Downes, Sarah
Other Authors: Snaith, Anna Lucy; Heim, Otto
Published: King's College London (University of London) 2014
Subjects:
813
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.656912
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6569122017-04-20T03:31:20ZReading Jean Rhys : empire, modernism and the politics of the visualDownes, SarahSnaith, Anna Lucy; Heim, Otto2014This thesis considers the relationship between literary modernism and visual culture in the work of Caribbean modernist Jean Rhys. Through analysis of a range of visual modes—theatre, fashion, visual art, cinema and exhibition culture—it examines the racialised sexual politics of Rhys’s modernist aesthetics, as represented in her texts of the 1920s—30s. I read Rhys’s four interwar novels—Quartet (1928), After Leaving Mr Mackenzie (1930), Voyage in the Dark (1934) and Good Morning, Midnight (1939)—in the context of contemporary visual practices and the politics of empire. Rhys’s descriptions of artistic practices, acts of viewing and interpreting art, and the identification of her protagonists as both objects and consumers of art are a crucial aspect of her anti-colonial feminism. The politics of vision and of empire are always intertwined for Rhys. Chapter One studies theatrical spectacle and everyday performances of the self. Chapter Two moves to the fashioning of female identities and sartorial constructions of Englishness. Chapter Three turns to Rhys’s use of ekphrasis to question representational structures as they exist in the modernist, primitivist art context. Chapter Four reads Rhys and cinema, focusing on divided or fractured subjectivities as relayed through allusions to distorted mirrors. This conveys Rhys’s powerful evocation of themes of alienation and dislocation. I conclude by analysing what ‘exhibition’ means for those occupying both subject and object visual positions within the imperial metropolis. Analysis is supported by readings of unpublished short stories, letters and poems, works that are relatively absent from current Rhys scholarship. The conjunction of revolutions in the visual arts and the destabilization of the empire in the modernist period provides clear space for investigation into the creation of new ways of seeing that provided a degree of visual agency for those deemed incapable of aesthetic production. Crucial to this is Rhys’s own Creolité. Situated within and outside of European visual subjectivity, Rhys’s work becomes vital to any study of social acts of seeing, in terms of individual subjectivity and within the wider systems of vision produced through the arts.813King's College London (University of London)http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.656912https://kclpure.kcl.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/reading-jean-rhys(e25be3c9-6fa2-4b2f-bd6c-681055967d3a).htmlElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 813
spellingShingle 813
Downes, Sarah
Reading Jean Rhys : empire, modernism and the politics of the visual
description This thesis considers the relationship between literary modernism and visual culture in the work of Caribbean modernist Jean Rhys. Through analysis of a range of visual modes—theatre, fashion, visual art, cinema and exhibition culture—it examines the racialised sexual politics of Rhys’s modernist aesthetics, as represented in her texts of the 1920s—30s. I read Rhys’s four interwar novels—Quartet (1928), After Leaving Mr Mackenzie (1930), Voyage in the Dark (1934) and Good Morning, Midnight (1939)—in the context of contemporary visual practices and the politics of empire. Rhys’s descriptions of artistic practices, acts of viewing and interpreting art, and the identification of her protagonists as both objects and consumers of art are a crucial aspect of her anti-colonial feminism. The politics of vision and of empire are always intertwined for Rhys. Chapter One studies theatrical spectacle and everyday performances of the self. Chapter Two moves to the fashioning of female identities and sartorial constructions of Englishness. Chapter Three turns to Rhys’s use of ekphrasis to question representational structures as they exist in the modernist, primitivist art context. Chapter Four reads Rhys and cinema, focusing on divided or fractured subjectivities as relayed through allusions to distorted mirrors. This conveys Rhys’s powerful evocation of themes of alienation and dislocation. I conclude by analysing what ‘exhibition’ means for those occupying both subject and object visual positions within the imperial metropolis. Analysis is supported by readings of unpublished short stories, letters and poems, works that are relatively absent from current Rhys scholarship. The conjunction of revolutions in the visual arts and the destabilization of the empire in the modernist period provides clear space for investigation into the creation of new ways of seeing that provided a degree of visual agency for those deemed incapable of aesthetic production. Crucial to this is Rhys’s own Creolité. Situated within and outside of European visual subjectivity, Rhys’s work becomes vital to any study of social acts of seeing, in terms of individual subjectivity and within the wider systems of vision produced through the arts.
author2 Snaith, Anna Lucy; Heim, Otto
author_facet Snaith, Anna Lucy; Heim, Otto
Downes, Sarah
author Downes, Sarah
author_sort Downes, Sarah
title Reading Jean Rhys : empire, modernism and the politics of the visual
title_short Reading Jean Rhys : empire, modernism and the politics of the visual
title_full Reading Jean Rhys : empire, modernism and the politics of the visual
title_fullStr Reading Jean Rhys : empire, modernism and the politics of the visual
title_full_unstemmed Reading Jean Rhys : empire, modernism and the politics of the visual
title_sort reading jean rhys : empire, modernism and the politics of the visual
publisher King's College London (University of London)
publishDate 2014
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.656912
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