My Dark Room: Spaces of the Inner Self in Eighteenth-Century England

Author:   Julie Park
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
ISBN:  

9780226824758


Pages:   344
Publication Date:   03 August 2023
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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My Dark Room: Spaces of the Inner Self in Eighteenth-Century England


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Author:   Julie Park
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
Imprint:   University of Chicago Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.626kg
ISBN:  

9780226824758


ISBN 10:   0226824756
Pages:   344
Publication Date:   03 August 2023
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

A beautiful book on the privacies of writing, the rapt silences of the mind's darkened room, lit by rays of the everyday: the habitations of thought that those before Proust conceived. My Dark Room answers to my sensibility; it teaches me who I am and where I come from, providing new coordinates and new darknesses between the points of light. * Alexander Nemerov, author of 'The Forest: A Fable of America in the 1830s' * Ranging across domestic architecture, gothic follies, the poetry of place, and the utility of the detachable pocket, My Dark Room explores the ways in which the camera obscura, both materially and conceptually, provided the corridor through which the interior lives of eighteenth-century subjects passed. In a dazzling sequence of chapters Julie Park captures the excitements and tensions that emerged as imaginative private worlds were projected on real geographies and spaces and, correspondingly, as real spaces determined the structures of interior lives. My Dark Room will unsettle the now very long-standing assumptions about the primacy of fiction and the novel in the construction of eighteenth-century subjectivities, as it makes a compelling case for the subject in space created not only through interior imaginative projections but also exterior realizations of those projections. * Peter de Bolla, University of Cambridge * My Dark Room is a wonderful mix of discovery and analysis. It reads the seventeenth and eighteenth-century fascination with the camera obscura as metaphor for the workings of interiority in both mind and art. With an impressive range of historical and philosophical contexts and delightful close readings of architectural and literary works, Park reveals the camera obscura modelling the spatial relationship between mind, landscape, and narrative. From country-house poems to gothic novels, from writing-closets to grottoes, pockets, enclosures, and cottages, Park herself models the 'spatial formalism' of the experience of interiors. * Cynthia Wall, University of Virginia *


"“A beautiful book on the privacies of writing, the rapt silences of the mind’s darkened room, lit by rays of the everyday: the habitations of thought that those before Proust conceived. My Dark Room answers to my sensibility; it teaches me who I am and where I come from, providing new coordinates and new darknesses between the points of light.” * Alexander Nemerov, author of 'The Forest: A Fable of America in the 1830s' * “My Dark Room explores the ways in which the camera obscura, both materially and conceptually, provided the corridor through which the interior lives of eighteenth-century subjects passed. In a dazzling sequence of chapters Julie Park captures the excitements and tensions that emerged as imaginative private worlds were projected on real geographies and spaces. My Dark Room will unsettle the now very long-standing assumptions about the primacy of fiction and the novel in the construction of eighteenth-century subjectivities, as it makes a compelling case for the subject in space created  through interior projections.” * Peter de Bolla, University of Cambridge * “Park animates the camera obscura trope as a perceptual dynamic for which, until now, we've had so few words. She interweaves a material history of the camera obscura with several disciplines until it becomes possible to reenvision eighteenth-century literary fiction as a transhistorical and intermedial home for the psyche. My Dark Room opens interiors we once assumed were shut, unsettling familiar narratives about the post-Enlightenment mind. This lucidly dreamed study is a feat of the critical imagination to be experienced as well as read. It will be admired and referenced for years to come.” * Jayne Lewis, University of California, Irvine * ""My Dark Room is a wonderful mix of discovery and analysis. With an impressive range of historical and philosophical contexts and delightful close readings of architectural and literary works, Park reveals the camera obscura modelling the spatial relationship between mind, landscape, and narrative."" * Cynthia Wall, University of Virginia * ""Park is a tireless scholar; she clearly loves what she's discovering spirited away in the archives, and her sense of wonder and delight can be contagious."" * Book Post * “In a book that takes illumination and insight as its subject, [Park’s] meticulous close readings and case studies open up rich possibilities for future work.” * Times Literary Supplement *"


Ranging across domestic architecture, gothic follies, the poetry of place, and the utility of the detachable pocket, My Dark Room explores the ways in which the camera obscura, both materially and conceptually, provided the corridor through which the interior lives of eighteenth-century subjects passed. In a dazzling sequence of chapters Julie Park captures the excitements and tensions that emerged as imaginative private worlds were projected on real geographies and spaces and, correspondingly, as real spaces determined the structures of interior lives. My Dark Room will unsettle the now very long-standing assumptions about the primacy of fiction and the novel in the construction of eighteenth-century subjectivities, as it makes a compelling case for the subject in space created not only through interior imaginative projections but also exterior realizations of those projections. * Peter de Bolla, University of Cambridge *


A beautiful book on the privacies of writing, the rapt silences of the mind's darkened room, lit by rays of the everyday: the habitations of thought that those before Proust conceived. My Dark Room answers to my sensibility; it teaches me who I am and where I come from, providing new coordinates and new darknesses between the points of light. * Alexander Nemerov, author of 'The Forest: A Fable of America in the 1830s' * My Dark Room explores the ways in which the camera obscura, both materially and conceptually, provided the corridor through which the interior lives of eighteenth-century subjects passed. In a dazzling sequence of chapters Julie Park captures the excitements and tensions that emerged as imaginative private worlds were projected on real geographies and spaces. My Dark Room will unsettle the now very long-standing assumptions about the primacy of fiction and the novel in the construction of eighteenth-century subjectivities, as it makes a compelling case for the subject in space created through interior projections. * Peter de Bolla, University of Cambridge * Park animates the camera obscura trope as a perceptual dynamic for which, until now, we've had so few words. She interweaves a material history of the camera obscura with anthropology, media archaeology, phenomenology, architectural history, and literary criticism until it becomes possible to re-envision eighteenth-century literary fiction as a transhistorical and intermedial home for the psyche. Anything but obscure, My Dark Room opens interiors we once assumed were shut, unsettling familiar narratives about the post-Enlightenment mind. Mental and physical enclosures from Pamela's pockets to Pope's grotto to Otranto's papery passages emerge as dynamic sites of interaction with their environments that anticipate today's transmedial aesthetic spaces. This lucidly dreamed study is a feat of the critical imagination to be experienced as well as read. It will be admired and referenced for years to come. * Jayne Lewis, University of California, Irvine * My Dark Room is a wonderful mix of discovery and analysis. With an impressive range of historical and philosophical contexts and delightful close readings of architectural and literary works, Park reveals the camera obscura modelling the spatial relationship between mind, landscape, and narrative. * Cynthia Wall, University of Virginia *


A beautiful book on the privacies of writing, the rapt silences of the mind's darkened room, lit by rays of the everyday: the habitations of thought that those before Proust conceived. My Dark Room answers to my sensibility; it teaches me who I am and where I come from, providing new coordinates and new darknesses between the points of light. * Alexander Nemerov, author of 'The Forest: A Fable of America in the 1830s' * My Dark Room explores the ways in which the camera obscura, both materially and conceptually, provided the corridor through which the interior lives of eighteenth-century subjects passed. In a dazzling sequence of chapters Julie Park captures the excitements and tensions that emerged as imaginative private worlds were projected on real geographies and spaces. My Dark Room will unsettle the now very long-standing assumptions about the primacy of fiction and the novel in the construction of eighteenth-century subjectivities, as it makes a compelling case for the subject in space created through interior projections. * Peter de Bolla, University of Cambridge * Park animates the camera obscura trope as a perceptual dynamic for which, until now, we've had so few words. She interweaves a material history of the camera obscura with several disciplines until it becomes possible to reenvision eighteenth-century literary fiction as a transhistorical and intermedial home for the psyche. My Dark Room opens interiors we once assumed were shut, unsettling familiar narratives about the post-Enlightenment mind. This lucidly dreamed study is a feat of the critical imagination to be experienced as well as read. It will be admired and referenced for years to come. * Jayne Lewis, University of California, Irvine * My Dark Room is a wonderful mix of discovery and analysis. With an impressive range of historical and philosophical contexts and delightful close readings of architectural and literary works, Park reveals the camera obscura modelling the spatial relationship between mind, landscape, and narrative. * Cynthia Wall, University of Virginia *


A beautiful book on the privacies of writing, the rapt silences of the mind's darkened room, lit by rays of the everyday: the habitations of thought that those before Proust conceived. My Dark Room answers to my sensibility; it teaches me who I am and where I come from, providing new coordinates and new darknesses between the points of light. * Alexander Nemerov, author of 'The Forest: A Fable of America in the 1830s' * My Dark Room explores the ways in which the camera obscura, both materially and conceptually, provided the corridor through which the interior lives of eighteenth-century subjects passed. In a dazzling sequence of chapters Julie Park captures the excitements and tensions that emerged as imaginative private worlds were projected on real geographies and spaces. My Dark Room will unsettle the now very long-standing assumptions about the primacy of fiction and the novel in the construction of eighteenth-century subjectivities, as it makes a compelling case for the subject in space created through interior projections. * Peter de Bolla, University of Cambridge * My Dark Room is a wonderful mix of discovery and analysis. With an impressive range of historical and philosophical contexts and delightful close readings of architectural and literary works, Park reveals the camera obscura modelling the spatial relationship between mind, landscape, and narrative. * Cynthia Wall, University of Virginia * Park interweaves a material history of the camera obscura with anthropology, media archaeology, phenomenology, architectural history, and literary criticism until it becomes possible to re-envision eighteenth-century literary fiction as a transhistorical and intermedial home for the psyche. Anything but obscure, My Dark Room opens interiors we once assumed were shut, unsettling familiar narratives about the post-Enlightenment mind. Mental and physical enclosures from Pamela's pockets to Pope's grotto to Otranto's papery passages emerge as dynamic sites of interaction with their environments that anticipate today's transmedial aesthetic spaces. This lucidly dreamed study is a feat of the critical imagination to be experienced as well as read. It will be admired and referenced for years to come. * Jayne Lewis, University of California, Irvine *


Author Information

Julie Park is the Paterno Family Librarian for Literature and professor of English at the Pennsylvania State University. She is the author of The Self and It: Novel Objects in Eighteenth-Century England and coeditor of Organic Supplements: Bodies and Things of the Natural World, 1580-1790.

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