Article ID: CBB045379834

Seeing Things: The Dilemma of Visual Subjectivity at the Dawn of the Bacteriological Age in Strindberg's The Father (2016)

unapi

This essay presents a new reading of Strindberg’s The Father in the light of developing lens technology during the late nineteenth century. By situating this play within the late-nineteenth-century material culture of microscopes and alongside Strindberg’s own writings about his encounters with microscopic experimentation, the essay exposes the play as darkly comedic, upending its traditional reading as a tragedy. Recasting the play in this light concomitantly allows for further awareness of its wholesale rejection of the notion that knowledge of objective truth is possible, with science or any other epistemological system. Contextualizing the scientific influences on Strindberg’s often very spiritual dramas, then, cyclically allows for even greater awareness of the contemporary scientific rhetoric—often vicious critiques of it—packaged into his dramatic cosmology, expanding the ways in which he must be understood as one of the first Modernist playwrights.

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Review Rebecka Klette (2016) Review of "Seeing Things: The Dilemma of Visual Subjectivity at the Dawn of the Bacteriological Age in Strindberg's The Father". Journal of Literature and Science (pp. 52-53). unapi

Citation URI
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Authors & Contributors
Andrei Pop
Nordenmark, Nils Viktor Emanuel
Watson, Cecelia Alexandre
Kelly, JoAnn
Bassiri, Nima Rad
Secord, Anne
Journals
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza
Perspectives on Science
Journal of Modern Literature
International Journal for the History of Engineering and Technology
Interdisciplinary Science Reviews
Publishers
Antique Telescope Society
Wayne State University
Zone Books
Cornell University Press
University of California, Berkeley
University of Washington
Concepts
Subjectivity
Lenses
Optics
Psychology
Science and art
Scientific apparatus and instruments
People
Nordenmark, Nils Viktor Emanuel
La Farge, John
Brontë, Charlotte
Tarde, Gabriel de
Haller, Albrecht von
Whytt, Robert
Time Periods
19th century
20th century, early
18th century
17th century
Modern
16th century
Places
Great Britain
England
Northern Europe
United States
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