Writing emotions of romantic love, in light of gas and electricity (1841-1913)

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Writing emotions of romantic love, in light of gas and electricity (1841-1913). / Beaufoy, Joanna.

I: Dix-Neuf, 31.03.2023.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Beaufoy, J 2023, 'Writing emotions of romantic love, in light of gas and electricity (1841-1913)', Dix-Neuf.

APA

Beaufoy, J. (Accepteret/In press). Writing emotions of romantic love, in light of gas and electricity (1841-1913). Dix-Neuf.

Vancouver

Beaufoy J. Writing emotions of romantic love, in light of gas and electricity (1841-1913). Dix-Neuf. 2023 mar. 31.

Author

Beaufoy, Joanna. / Writing emotions of romantic love, in light of gas and electricity (1841-1913). I: Dix-Neuf. 2023.

Bibtex

@article{3e4c5299b2374a23ba12754a458b6d0c,
title = "Writing emotions of romantic love, in light of gas and electricity (1841-1913)",
abstract = "Between 1841 and 1913, the lighting of Paris{\textquoteright} streets, outdoor spaces, buildings and homes underwent the most radical transformation in the city{\textquoteright}s history. New degrees of brightness, colours, tones, effects and rituals found their way into literature, as writers used them to evoke emotions. This article, specifically focusing on literary scenes where emotions relating to romantic love are evoked at the same time as artificial lighting, posits that lighting as a narrative device was a way to to generate romantic tension, to set scenes for love to happen, to depict emotional states, and to affect the reader{\textquoteright}s attention and feelings. Readings from a range of texts written between 1841 and 1913 are given as examples of lighting technologies{\textquoteright} influence on writing about emotion, suggesting that the development of artificial lighting expanded the possibilities of narrating emotional experience. The implication is to invite more literary analysis into emotions that take new technologies as a starting point.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, history of emotions, Nighttime light, Paris, Love, gaslight, electric light",
author = "Joanna Beaufoy",
note = "Joanna Beaufoy is a PhD candidate at the University of Copenhagen. Her work is supported by the Velux Foundation.",
year = "2023",
month = mar,
day = "31",
language = "English",
journal = "Dix-Neuf",
issn = "1478-7318",
publisher = "Maney Publishing",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Writing emotions of romantic love, in light of gas and electricity (1841-1913)

AU - Beaufoy, Joanna

N1 - Joanna Beaufoy is a PhD candidate at the University of Copenhagen. Her work is supported by the Velux Foundation.

PY - 2023/3/31

Y1 - 2023/3/31

N2 - Between 1841 and 1913, the lighting of Paris’ streets, outdoor spaces, buildings and homes underwent the most radical transformation in the city’s history. New degrees of brightness, colours, tones, effects and rituals found their way into literature, as writers used them to evoke emotions. This article, specifically focusing on literary scenes where emotions relating to romantic love are evoked at the same time as artificial lighting, posits that lighting as a narrative device was a way to to generate romantic tension, to set scenes for love to happen, to depict emotional states, and to affect the reader’s attention and feelings. Readings from a range of texts written between 1841 and 1913 are given as examples of lighting technologies’ influence on writing about emotion, suggesting that the development of artificial lighting expanded the possibilities of narrating emotional experience. The implication is to invite more literary analysis into emotions that take new technologies as a starting point.

AB - Between 1841 and 1913, the lighting of Paris’ streets, outdoor spaces, buildings and homes underwent the most radical transformation in the city’s history. New degrees of brightness, colours, tones, effects and rituals found their way into literature, as writers used them to evoke emotions. This article, specifically focusing on literary scenes where emotions relating to romantic love are evoked at the same time as artificial lighting, posits that lighting as a narrative device was a way to to generate romantic tension, to set scenes for love to happen, to depict emotional states, and to affect the reader’s attention and feelings. Readings from a range of texts written between 1841 and 1913 are given as examples of lighting technologies’ influence on writing about emotion, suggesting that the development of artificial lighting expanded the possibilities of narrating emotional experience. The implication is to invite more literary analysis into emotions that take new technologies as a starting point.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - history of emotions

KW - Nighttime light

KW - Paris

KW - Love

KW - gaslight

KW - electric light

M3 - Journal article

JO - Dix-Neuf

JF - Dix-Neuf

SN - 1478-7318

ER -

ID: 325472825