ABSTRACT

Beginning with the premise that the portrait was undergoing a shift in both form and function during the Romantic age, Joe Bray examines how these changes are reflected in the fiction of writers such as Maria Edgeworth, Jane Austen, Sir Walter Scott, Elizabeth Hamilton and Amelia Opie. Bray considers portraiture in a broad sense as encompassing caricature and the miniature, as well as the classic portraits of Sir Joshua Reynolds and others. He argues that the portrait in fiction often functions not as a transparent index to character or as a means of producing a straightforward likeness, but rather as a cue for misreading and a sign of the slipperiness and subjectivity of interpretation. The book is concerned with more than simply the appearance of portraits in Romantic fiction, however. More broadly, The Portrait in Fiction of the Romantic Period investigates how the language of portraiture pervades the novel in this period and how the two art forms exert mutual stylistic influence on each other.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

The portrait and the novel

chapter 1|26 pages

The portrait in public

chapter 2|30 pages

Exchanging ‘dear self’

The miniature portrait in the novel of sensibility and the Gothic

chapter 3|38 pages

Visual and verbal caricature

chapter 4|30 pages

Jane Austen

The subjectivity of ‘likeness’

chapter 5|33 pages

Sir Walter Scott

Reworking the Gothic portrait

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion

‘The very thing itself’