ABSTRACT

Exploring how the modern novel's complex depictions of parenthood restructure traditional conceptions of the Romantic sublime, Erin K. Johns Speese shows how William Faulkner, E.M. Forster, D.H. Lawrence, and Virginia Woolf use related strategies to rewrite the traditional sublime as an intersubjective experience. Speese shows that this reframing depends on the recognition of social objectification and an ethics of reciprocal empathy between mothers and fathers. She juxtaposes traditional aesthetics and Slavoj Žižek’s concept of the sublime object of ideology with recent theoretical work regarding identity, arguing that these modern novelists construct what she terms a "sublime subject," that is, a person who functions in the space of the traditional sublime object. In revealing the possibility of transcendent emotional connection over reason, these novelists critique the objectification of the other in favor of a sublime experience that reveals the subject-shattering power of empathy.

chapter 1|19 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|24 pages

A novel feeling

Aesthetics of emotion and the modern novel

chapter 3|22 pages

Mater sacer

Addie as sublime object in William Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying

chapter 4|21 pages

Only disconnect

Ruth Wilcox, death, and the sublime object in Howards End

chapter 5|31 pages

Transcending the rainbow

The possibility of sublime intersubjectivity in D.H. Lawrence’s The Rainbow

chapter 6|28 pages

“What is R?”

Mrs. Ramsay as feminism’s sublime object in Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse

chapter |7 pages

Epilogue

Žižek’s mom: theory, feminism, and the mother