Virginia Woolf’s “Imageographie”: On New Paths in the Modernist Text-Image Interconnection

The complexity of the relationship between Modernism and the visual arts involves consideration of the key theoretical crux of how and to what extent images reproduce reality. The cinema in particular has exerted a strong influence on Modernist writers as the novelty of the medium, and the new possi...

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Main Author: Teresa Prudente
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Università degli Studi di Torino 2019-06-01
Series:CoSMO
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ojs.unito.it/index.php/COSMO/article/view/3440
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spelling doaj-ab4afdc2e431416d81ac44d12b6912022021-09-13T19:56:28ZdeuUniversità degli Studi di TorinoCoSMO2281-66582019-06-011410.13135/2281-6658/3440Virginia Woolf’s “Imageographie”: On New Paths in the Modernist Text-Image InterconnectionTeresa Prudente0Università di TorinoThe complexity of the relationship between Modernism and the visual arts involves consideration of the key theoretical crux of how and to what extent images reproduce reality. The cinema in particular has exerted a strong influence on Modernist writers as the novelty of the medium, and the new possibilities it offered, could not but arise the interest of writers that were at work with new, experimental modalities of writing. Yet in Modernist writers, as it happens in major theoretical reflections on the ʻrepresentationalʼ arts, the exploration of the relationship between images and words was a syncretic one, activating a dynamic interchange between words and pictorial, photographic and cinematic images (and narration). The article starts from these premises to consider a recent work in the field, Adèle Cassigneul’s Voir, observer, penser. Virginia Woolf et la photo-cinématographie (2018), which fills the gap of the less explored relationship between Modernism and photography while also proposing new aesthetic and poetic interpretative categories, such as Woolf’s photo-cinématographie and imageographie.https://www.ojs.unito.it/index.php/COSMO/article/view/3440ModernismVirginia Woolfphotographypaintingcinematheory of art
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Teresa Prudente
spellingShingle Teresa Prudente
Virginia Woolf’s “Imageographie”: On New Paths in the Modernist Text-Image Interconnection
CoSMO
Modernism
Virginia Woolf
photography
painting
cinema
theory of art
author_facet Teresa Prudente
author_sort Teresa Prudente
title Virginia Woolf’s “Imageographie”: On New Paths in the Modernist Text-Image Interconnection
title_short Virginia Woolf’s “Imageographie”: On New Paths in the Modernist Text-Image Interconnection
title_full Virginia Woolf’s “Imageographie”: On New Paths in the Modernist Text-Image Interconnection
title_fullStr Virginia Woolf’s “Imageographie”: On New Paths in the Modernist Text-Image Interconnection
title_full_unstemmed Virginia Woolf’s “Imageographie”: On New Paths in the Modernist Text-Image Interconnection
title_sort virginia woolf’s “imageographie”: on new paths in the modernist text-image interconnection
publisher Università degli Studi di Torino
series CoSMO
issn 2281-6658
publishDate 2019-06-01
description The complexity of the relationship between Modernism and the visual arts involves consideration of the key theoretical crux of how and to what extent images reproduce reality. The cinema in particular has exerted a strong influence on Modernist writers as the novelty of the medium, and the new possibilities it offered, could not but arise the interest of writers that were at work with new, experimental modalities of writing. Yet in Modernist writers, as it happens in major theoretical reflections on the ʻrepresentationalʼ arts, the exploration of the relationship between images and words was a syncretic one, activating a dynamic interchange between words and pictorial, photographic and cinematic images (and narration). The article starts from these premises to consider a recent work in the field, Adèle Cassigneul’s Voir, observer, penser. Virginia Woolf et la photo-cinématographie (2018), which fills the gap of the less explored relationship between Modernism and photography while also proposing new aesthetic and poetic interpretative categories, such as Woolf’s photo-cinématographie and imageographie.
topic Modernism
Virginia Woolf
photography
painting
cinema
theory of art
url https://www.ojs.unito.it/index.php/COSMO/article/view/3440
work_keys_str_mv AT teresaprudente virginiawoolfsimageographieonnewpathsinthemodernisttextimageinterconnection
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