RestrictedArchive–Te Puna Rangahau
Permanent URI for this communityhttps://ir.wgtn.ac.nz/handle/123456789/1595
Welcome to RestrictedArchive–Te Puna Rangahau, the closed repository for research outputs from Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand.
This collection contains papers and theses authored by University staff and students.
The content in the collection was migrated from http://restrictedarchive.vuw.ac.nz in 2021.
Access to this collection is restricted to University staff and students.
Browse
Browsing RestrictedArchive–Te Puna Rangahau by Subject "17th century"
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
- Results Per Page
- Sort Options
Item Restricted Dangerous Frontispieces: Graphic Charactering and the Scandal of Representation in English Renaissance Literature.(Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington, 1994) Shep, Sydney JocelynThis dissertation argues that two competing systems of signification existed in the English Renaissance: the scientific and the rhetorical. The first assumes a prelapsarian ideal of unmediated and unequivocal correspondence between signifier and signified, an approach rooted in centuries of pseudo-scientific, theological and philosophical thought, and supported by the objective methodology and material knowledge of the scientific revolution. The second calls this identity into question by emphasising that arbitrary, strictly conventional, and tenuous relationship between the signifier and signified, an approach based upon a recognition of the representational nature of language. The tension between these two referential systems can be profitably illustrated by an examination of character in the period. The concept of character brings into relief the mechanisms of representation which either enable or disable these two semiotic systems. The scene of engagement is located upon the body, where graphic technology - brought. to bear both in writing and picturing - exposes the representational link between signifier and the signified. Renaissance definitions of character are based upon a physiognomic model which posits a direct. Correspondence between the inner and the outer man. character – that ineffable essence which individualises a person – is rendered visible and legible through tangible marks or characters physically inscribed upon the body; "character" embraces both the literal and the figurative, the concrete and the abstract. However, the conceptualisation of the body as the interface between an inner and outer reality suggests that the assumed unity of signifier and signified - that is, the identity of the person - is always already signalled by difference and separation. This is confirmed by the rhetoric of contemporary physiognomic texts, whose scientific approach is betrayed by the very same graphic technology employed as a vehicle for characterological definition. The scandalous result is awareness of the body as the scene of duplicitous representation, spurious copies, and wandering reproductions. In the space opened up between the signifier and signified, caricature and satire prevail. This pattern of displacement and subsequent redefinition is repeated in a study of other representations of character particular to the period: portrait miniatures, the genre of character literature, and drama. As a consequence of this tension between competing semiotic systems, the Renaissance witnessed a crisis of representation, a profound revaluation of grounds of signification, and a thorough rethinking of the notion of character. As the scientific, physiognomic prescription is proven fallible, rhetorical forms of evidence verifiable in the courtroom are deployed to explain character. Ultimately, the scene of engagement is relocated entirely: the body is replaced by the space of psychic interiority and the attendant analysis of human subjectivity. Graphic charactering per se is then relegated to the margins of rhetorical discourse.