Congrès: 11th conference of the European Society for the Study of English, Boğaziçi University, Instanbul, Turkey — September 4-8, 2012 (Seminar S56)
The figure of the beautiful reclining female sleeper is a recurring topic in the Victorian imagination which calls on visual, literary and erotic connotations, all contributing to a complex density of readings involving aesthetics, gender definition and medical assumptions of the age. From the Pre-Raphaelites and late Victorian aesthetes to the adaptors of fairy tales, from the explorers of sleep theory to the fascinated crowds who visited Ellen Sadler — the real-life "Sleeping Maid" who is reported to have slept from 1871 to 1880 — artists, scientists and the larger public seem to have shared a common interest in the myth of the Briar Rose and its contemporary implications. This seminar seeks to bring together and examine a corpus of Sleeping Beauties drawn from Victorian art, literature and medical reports and to explore the significance of the enduring revival of the myth.
![study for Briarose](../painting/bj/drawings/37.jpg)
Study for one of the attendant wonen in “The Briarose Series” by Burne-Jones. Click on thumbnail for larger image.
Date limite d'envoi des propositions : 31 janvier 2012
Notification d’acceptation : 29 février 2012
Site du congrès :
Atelier référencé sous la rubrique "Seminar": voir Seminar S56.
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Last modified 14 December 2011