Word and Image
2005–2006
Topic Directors: Catriona
MacLeod, Associate Professor and Undergraduate
Chair of German, and Liliane
Weissberg, Christopher H. Browne Distinguished
Professor in the Arts and Sciences, Professor of German
and Comparative Literature, and Graduate Chair, Germanic
Languages and Literatures
"Mixed media" culture has changed
from a novelty to the norm in our day. University disciplines
struggle to justify their borders. Small children outperform
their media-challenged parents. The Internet, films,
television, advertising, video games, and high-art hybrids
(installations, performance art) demand an ever-increasing
ability to decode interactions between words and images.
Under the circumstances, this would seem
an opportune moment to investigate the word-and-image
relation. First, we must recognize that it has a past.
Indeed, the connection between the verbal and visual
has been fundamental to the history of several humanistic
disciplines. We might revisit the ancient yet pressing
debate about the respective abilities of words and images
to represent. From the Renaissance “paragone”
or competition among the rival arts, to the eighteenth-century
“sister arts,” to Romantic ideals of synthesis
and recombination, the word-image relationship has been
a continuous theme of literary and art historical thought.
How words and images represent and whether
they enjoy a harmonious kinship, engage in border skirmishes,
or seek to annihilate one another, are not merely formal
matters. The history of iconoclasm alone tells us about
the ideological stakes in the debate. The emotion and
loyalties involved in the process of memorialization—
notably, after the World Trade Center disaster—seem
to demand multi-media expression. And the word-image
opposition is linked to other strongly ideological binaries:
masculinity versus femininity, time versus space, abstraction
versus materiality, art versus nature.
Our inquiry must also encompass new technologies
for meshing words and images. For example, the verbal
“crawler” at the bottom of the television
screen occupies the same visual field as the visual
footage of an entirely different news story. Here broadcast
news demands that we make simultaneous sense of discontinuous
media. The new information resources available via the
Internet and in software applications present us with
constantly mutating layerings of words and pictures.
Do such media images act as supplements or “illustrations”
to words, or vice versa? What relation lies between
word and image, what are its claims, and how does it
insert itself into our consciousness?
Much contemporary art explicitly refuses
traditional classification and explores intersections
between media: for example, land art, installation art,
video art, or (a recently coined term) “word-and-image
art.” In current literature, to cite only one
example, the fiction of W. G. Sebald has attracted critical
attention for its interweaving of narrative and photography.
Our current preoccupation with hybrid forms could helpfully
be historicized: what do they have in common with the
illuminated manuscript, the emblem book, the cartoon,
the comic strip, or film? How has the visual entered
literary genres, how have words and texts changed the
way we view and “read” art—historically,
or in the present?
With this broad view in mind, the Penn
Humanities Forum invites your participation!
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Programs & Fellows
2005–2006
Public
Events
Mellon
Postdoc Fellows
Penn Faculty
Fellows
Regional
Fellows
Undergraduate
Fellows
Graduate
Humanities Forum
We gratefully acknowledge the following
organizations and programs for their support this year:
Hershey Family Foundation, Dr. S.T. Distinguished Lecture
in the Humanities Fund, Andrew W. Mellon Foundation,
Marvin and Sybil Weiner Fund of the Penn Library, University
of Pennsylvania Museum, Office of the Provost, International
Association of Word and Image Studies/IAWERTI, Arthur
Ross Gallery, Center for Programs in Contemporary Writing,
Jewish Studies Program, Institute of Contemporary Art,
Institute on Aging of the School of Medicine, Program
in Comparative Literature, Theater Arts Program, and
the Departments of English, German, History of Art,
and Romance Languages.
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