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The Language of the Eyes
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21 July 2005

Recovers a dynamic women's tradition of vision and sexuality, challenging Darwinian and Freudian accounts of women as nonvisual sexual agents.
While Darwinian and Freudian theories of vision and sexuality have represented women as lacking visual agency, Daryl Ogden's The Language of the Eyes argues that "the gaze" is not merely a masculine phenomenon, and that women have powerfully desiring eyes as well. Ogden offers a comprehensive cultural history of female visuality in England by analyzing scientific writings, conduct books, illustrated periodicals, poetry, painting, and novels, and he makes important and hitherto unrecognized connections between literary history, cultural studies, and science studies. In so doing, Ogden accomplishes what numerous feminist critics-especially film theorists-have not: the recovery of the modern female spectator from historical obscurity.
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction: A Feminine Language of the Eyes?
1. The Conduct of the Eyes: Feminine Discourses of Vision in Eighteenth-Century England
Case Study 1. Lesbian Vision in Clarissa
2. Ocular Reproduction, Sexual Difference, and Romantic Vision
Case Study 2. Domestic and Sexual Vision in Adam Bede
3. The Descent of Sexual Selection: Evolution and the Politics of Female Vision in Victorian England
Case Study 3. Female Spectatorship and Sexual Selection in Far from the Madding Crowd
4. Sigmund Freud, Virginia Woolf, and the Modernist Female Spectator
Case Study 4. Feminine Epistemology and Visual Desire in To the Lighthouse
Conclusion: Clarissa Dalloway and Modern Female Visuality in England
Notes
Bibliography
Index