圖書名稱:A Moment of Joy: Essays on Art, Writing and Life
內容簡介
This book is for readers who are interested in literature, visual arts and writings about life. Most of the time, life itself, including personal ones and collective ones (such as nation, natural environment and so forth), gives incredible inspirations to the one who is writing. And yet, through more reading and more thinking, the writing self can imagine someone else’s way of living, as if he or she is living through it. This collection of essays brings literature and visual arts together, as their aesthetics come to complete each other.
本書特色
A collection of essays that explores the intricate relationships between literature and art, bringing new insights into famous writers such as Henry James and Virginia Woolfe.
作者介紹
作者簡介
Allison Tzu Yu Lin
Dr Tzu Yu Allison Lin received her PhD in English and Comparative Literature from Goldsmiths, University of London. Her research interests include visual and verbal representations, literary theory and criticism, writers and cities. Dr Lin has publications such as articles and books in English and in Chinese, including Virginia Woolf and the European Avant-Garde (2009) and Mystic Virginia Woolf (2012). She is an assistant professor in Faculty of Education, Gaziantep University, Turkey.
目錄
Acknowledgements
Preface
Chapter 1 Through the Gaze: History, Literature and Arts
Chapter 2 Jane Eyre: Arts in the Novel of Charlotte Brontë
Chapter 3 Teaching English and Cultural Exchange in Gaziantep
Chapter 4 Roger Fry, Istanbul, and the Art of Seeing
Chapter 5 The Dialectical Relation: Landscape and History in The Last of the Mohicans and The Course of Empire
Chapter 6 Self, Art, Fiction: The Portrait of a Lady
Chapter 7 London and Crisis in Henry James’s The Awkward Age
Chapter 8 The Flâneur’s Gaze and the Dialectical Representation of London: Using Woolf’s “Street Haunting” as an Example
The idea of having a collection of essays published is quite a recent one. Right after I joined Education Faculty, about one year ago, it came to my mind. In Turkey, the study of literature is actually quite a problematic one. Students in departments which are related to literary studies (in Faculty of Letters or Faculty of Letters and Sciences) mostly worry about their futures, since the system itself will represent a bit of challenge for them to become language teachers. Any studies related to literature, in general, is not for enjoyment or or fun. The study itself, indeed, expresses a general anxiety of facing a future of uncertainty.
Under such a different, and yet challenging academic environment, it is really difficult to teach literature, especially literature in English. Students are used to be passive. Creative thinkings and links (for example, literature and critical theory, literature and visual arts) are not so much expected as in other countries. Too much links and creative works would be seen as unclear and as something unnecessary.
Teaching and doing research are truly quite different things. In research, I am able to care more about what I can achieve, instead of thinking about what can students achieve in the class. It may look very much impossible, to make students see what I see; still, it is worth it to put those ideas into words. In reading, rather than in listening and taking notes, they can also at least try to appreciate not only literature as literature, arts as arts, but to feel the connection which is beyond words and images.