Eyes of Love: The Gaze in English and French Paintings and Novels, 1840-1900Eyes of Love argues against a widely held theory about "the gaze" - that women are merely passive erotic objects, while men are active erotic subjects. "Stephen Kern focuses our attention on eyes and the meaning they convey. This simple idea, here brilliantly developed, uncovers patterns of composition which unite the French Impressionists with late Victorian artists."--The Independent |
From inside the book
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Contents
Acknowledgements | 6 |
Meeting | 31 |
Recreation | 54 |
Working | 81 |
The Nude | 99 |
Prostitution | 128 |
Seduction | 153 |
Rescue | 181 |
Marriage | 207 |
Other editions - View all
Eyes of Love: "The Gaze in English and French Culture, 1840-1900" Stephen Kern No preview available - 1996 |
Common terms and phrases
Andromeda argues Art Gallery bathers Baudelaire beauty beloved body Burne-Jones centre courtesan courtship culture dangerous dark Degas Degas's depicted desire double standard Edgar Degas Edouard Manet emotional erotic evidence expression eyes face female feminine flâneur Folies-Bergère French frontal Gauguin glance hand Hardy Harmondsworth heroine human husband illus images Impressionists inspired interpretation James Tissot Jane Eyre John Everett Millais Linda Nochlin London look lovers Maggie male artists male gaze man's Manet marriage Mary masculine men's Millais moral code morality of love Musée d'Orsay naked Nana National Gallery nineteenth-century novel nude object objectified oil on canvas Olympia painting Paris Perseus Pierre Renoir posed Pre-Raphaelite proposal composition prostitutes Quoted Renoir rescue reveals role Rossetti scene seductive seductress sexual shadow shows Sikes stares subjectivity suggests Suzon Svengali symbol Tate Gallery Tess Thomas Hardy Tissot trans Trilby viewer visible vision visual wife William Holman Hunt woman York