Diplomarbeit, 2003
181 Seiten, Note: very good
1. Introduction: Descriptions of physiognomies in (English) literature and their significance
2. Definitions of the terminology: ‘physiognomy’, ‘pathognomy’ and ‘body language’
II.Descriptions of physiognomies in mid-19th-century realist fiction as a reflection of the period’s norms and worldviews
3. The general importance of physiognomy in the realist context: the dominance of ‘readable’ physiognomy as a confirmation of an objective, transparent world
4. Descriptions of physiognomies in Elizabeth Gaskell’s North and South (1854-55): strong confirmation of a transparent, ‘readable’ world
4.1. Introduction
4.2. The narrative transmission of physiognomic descriptions
4.2.1. Transparent portraits of characters transmitted by an authorial narrator
4.2.2. Characters as successful ‘readers’ of physiognomies and the functioning of non-verbal communication
4.3. The ‘message’ of transparent faces
4.3.1. General remarks
4.3.2. Physiognomy as an indicator of a hereditary background: family likeness
4.3.3. Physiognomy as a reflection of influential circumstances: events, milieu (‘local origin’) and social class
4.3.3.1. General remarks
4.3.3.2. Physiognomy as an indicator of influential events
4.3.3.3. Physiognomy as an indicator of the milieu or local origin
4.3.3.4. Physiognomy as a class indicator
4.3.4. Physiognomy as a moral indicator
4.4. Occasional opacity of faces and its (plausible) reasons
4.5. Conclusion
5. Descriptions of physiognomies in George Eliot’s Adam Bede (1859): confirmation of a transparent world partly undermined by critical authorial remarks
5.1. Introduction
5.2. The narrative transmission of physiognomic descriptions
5.2.1. Transparent portraits of characters transmitted by an authorial narrator
5.2.2. Characters as successful ‘readers’ of physiognomies and the functioning of non-verbal communication
5.3. The ‘message’ of transparent faces
5.3.1. General remarks
5.3.2. Physiognomy as an indicator of a hereditary background: family likeness
5.3.3. Physiognomy as a reflection of influential circumstances: events, milieu (‘local’ and ‘racial’ origin) and social class
5.3.4. Physiognomy as a moral indicator
5.4. Doubts about a ‘readable’ world: instances of opacity (and their reasons) and critical authorial remarks
5.4.1. General remarks
5.4.2. Opacity in Adam Bede’s faces and critical authorial comments on a ‘readable’ world
5.5. Conclusion
II.Descriptions of physiognomies in early modernism as a reflection of the period’s new norms and changed worldviews
6. Early modernism: the gradual rejection of realist norms, new modernist aesthetics and the consequences for descriptions of physiognomies
7. Descriptions of physiognomies in D.H. Lawrence’s Lady Chatterley’s Lover (1928): partial continuation of the realist tradition and the growing importance of subjective perceptions of physiognomies
7.1. Introduction: the peculiarity of D.H. Lawrence’s style
7.2. The narrative transmission of physiognomic descriptions
7.2.1. Remnants of transparent portraits of characters transmitted by an authorial narrator
7.2.2. Enhanced importance of intradiegetic physiognomists: continuation of ‘transparent’ physiognomic observations, and the increase in (un-)reliable subjective physiognomic perceptions and in non-verbal communication
7.2.2.1. General remarks
7.2.2.2. Characters as physiognomists (I): Clifford Chatterley: the continuation of the realist belief in transparent physiognomies
7.2.2.3. Characters as physiognomists (II): Connie Chatterley: the heroine’s overall belief in transparency in spite of her occasional inability to ‘read’ faces
7.2.2.4. The increase in non-verbal communication
7.3. The message of faces and bodies: transparent faces in the realist tradition, ‘new’ and ‘reduced’ transparency
7.3.1. General remarks
7.3.2. Transparent faces in the realist tradition: Physiognomy as an indicator of a hereditary background, as a reflection of influential circumstances: events, milieu (‘local origin’) and social class
7.3.3. ‘New’ transparency: descriptions of physiognomies and bodies as indicators of sexual experience
7.3.4. ‘Reduced’ transparency: vital, sexual descriptions of bodies for their own sake
7.4. Conclusion
8. Descriptions of physiognomies in Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway (1925): the dominance of subjective, ambiguous perceptions of physiognomies as a strong undermining of the realist worldview and as a reflection of a ‘new’ sceptical approach to the world
8.1. Introduction: Virginia Woolf’s approach to the world and the new treatment of physiognomies
8.2. The narrative transmission of physiognomic descriptions
8.2.1. The overall withdrawal of the authorial narrator and its consequences for the treatment of physiognomies
8.2.2. Characters as the novel’s major physiognomists: various subjective perceptions of physiognomies and the lack of a ‘common’ worldview
8.2.2.1. General remarks
8.2.2.2. Characters as physiognomists (I): Clarissa Dalloway: the novel’s heroine as a representative of the traditional belief in ‘speaking’ faces
8.2.2.3. Characters as physiognomists (II): Septimus Warren Smith: an insane person’s distorted belief in transparent physiognomies
8.2.2.4. Characters as physiognomists (III): Peter Walsh: observations dominated by his ‘male gaze’ and the implicit rejection of realism’s epistemological basis
8.2.2.5. Characters as physiognomists (IV): Elizabeth Dalloway: her self-perception as a (possible) projection of her feeling of ‘otherness’
8.3. Conclusion
9. Final remarks
10. Bibliography
This thesis examines the representation of physiognomy—the interpretation of character from physical appearance—in English fiction across two distinct literary periods: 19th-century realism and early 20th-century modernism. The central research question investigates how descriptions of characters' physical traits serve as a metonymic key to the worldview, epistemological norms, and implied aesthetics of the respective authors and their era.
The Realist Tradition of Transparent Faces
Whereas in (English) literature until the 18th century, authors tended to focus on the action of the story and at the same time more or less ignored the visualising of the fictitious world, the attempts to visualise the intradiegetic ‘reality’ of novels have clearly and strongly increased since the 18th century, leading to a climax of ‘visualised’ intradiegetic realities in 19th-century realism. Among other (generally) detailed descriptions – of, for example, landscapes, weather, houses, rooms, clothes – descriptions of characters’ physiognomies strongly gained in importance, as Werner Wolf underlines in his latest essay on ‘speaking faces’ (2002a: 395).
Descriptions of characters’ physiognomic traits or pathognomic reactions can have various functions. Like other descriptions, they have the primary effect of enhancing the aesthetic illusion of the fictitious world; moreover, they help the readers to identify and tell characters apart. In addition to these obvious functions, there are, however, functions which not only partly deviate from the reader’s real-life experience, but are more relevant for this paper’s thesis and will thus be focused on during the following analysis: in the majority of instances, facial descriptions in realist fiction are not neutral observations but fulfil further functions.
1. Introduction: Descriptions of physiognomies in (English) literature and their significance: This chapter establishes the theoretical groundwork and the thesis that physiognomic descriptions function as a metonymy for the underlying epistemological norms of a literary era.
2. Definitions of the terminology: ‘physiognomy’, ‘pathognomy’ and ‘body language’: Defines the key terms used in the study, distinguishing between permanent physiognomic traits and temporary pathognomic reactions.
II.Descriptions of physiognomies in mid-19th-century realist fiction as a reflection of the period’s norms and worldviews: An analysis of how realist authors utilize physiognomy to confirm the existence of an objective, transparent, and explainable world.
3. The general importance of physiognomy in the realist context: the dominance of ‘readable’ physiognomy as a confirmation of an objective, transparent world: Discusses the heightened interest in visualizing fictitious characters and the subsequent rise of physiognomic detail as a tool for creating aesthetic illusion.
4. Descriptions of physiognomies in Elizabeth Gaskell’s North and South (1854-55): strong confirmation of a transparent, ‘readable’ world: Examines Gaskell’s industrial novel as a prime example of realist aesthetics, where characters' faces are interpreted as reliable, transparent indices of their inner morality and background.
5. Descriptions of physiognomies in George Eliot’s Adam Bede (1859): confirmation of a transparent world partly undermined by critical authorial remarks: Contrasts Gaskell’s uncritical realism with Eliot’s more skeptical approach, which occasionally questions the validity of reading character from appearance.
II.Descriptions of physiognomies in early modernism as a reflection of the period’s new norms and changed worldviews: Explores the shift in literary aesthetics as the confidence in an objective, transparent reality begins to decline.
6. Early modernism: the gradual rejection of realist norms, new modernist aesthetics and the consequences for descriptions of physiognomies: Provides a theoretical overview of how the rise of modernist subjectivity began to replace the objective, panoramic views typical of the 19th century.
7. Descriptions of physiognomies in D.H. Lawrence’s Lady Chatterley’s Lover (1928): partial continuation of the realist tradition and the growing importance of subjective perceptions of physiognomies: Analyzes Lawrence’s "moderate" modernism, which combines realist character tropes with a growing focus on sexuality and subjective bodily experience.
8. Descriptions of physiognomies in Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway (1925): the dominance of subjective, ambiguous perceptions of physiognomies as a strong undermining of the realist worldview and as a reflection of a ‘new’ sceptical approach to the world: Investigates Woolf’s radical modernism, where the "stream of consciousness" technique and multiple perspectives render physiognomy an unreliable and fragmented source of knowledge.
9. Final remarks: Summarizes the study’s findings, confirming that the treatment of physiognomy is a reliable index for observing the historical transition from realist optimism to modernist skepticism.
10. Bibliography: A comprehensive list of the primary and secondary literature cited in the thesis.
Physiognomy, Realism, Modernism, Elizabeth Gaskell, George Eliot, D.H. Lawrence, Virginia Woolf, Epistemology, Literary Aesthetics, Characterization, Narrative Theory, Subjectivity, Transparency, Pathognomy, Body Language.
The thesis aims to demonstrate that the way characters’ physical appearances are described in literature serves as a diagnostic tool for understanding the underlying epistemological worldview of a specific literary period.
Physiognomy is treated both as the physical form of an individual and as the "art" of interpreting that form to infer inner character, social status, or moral integrity.
The author uses a metonymical approach, analyzing physiognomic descriptions as parts that represent the whole diegetic reality and the intellectual climate of the respective literary epoch.
They are chosen to represent the extremes of the spectrum: Gaskell exemplifies the realist tradition of the "transparent" face, while Woolf represents the radical modernist shift toward subjective, ambiguous, and fragmented perceptions of the self and others.
Physiognomy refers to permanent physical traits, whereas pathognomy refers to temporary, often sudden changes in expression caused by emotions like shock or anger.
In realism, the omniscient narrator acts as a reliable guide to character. In modernism, this authority is withdrawn, forcing the reader to navigate unreliable and subjective impressions filtered through individual characters' consciousness.
Because Lawrence’s focus shifts from the face to the vitality of the entire body, particularly in the context of sexual experience, which functions as a new, modernist form of "transparency."
Woolf actively mocks and undermines this belief by presenting characters whose inner lives are largely inaccessible, and whose physical appearances lead observers to contradictory or entirely fabricated conclusions.
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