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Portrait Miniatures: Fictionality, Visual Culture, and the Scene of Recognition in Early National America

Pethers, Matthew; Koenigs, Thomas

Authors

Thomas Koenigs



Abstract

This essay seeks to expand the geographical and formal scope of the concept of fictionality by examining the self-conscious presentation of fictional beings’ nonreferentiality in early American visual culture. Its principal case study is a portrait of Susanna Rowson’s popular heroine Charlotte Temple by the New York engraver Cornelius Tiebout, which appeared in an 1809 edition of Rowson’s novel. Unpacking this image’s dense web of allusions to the painterly tradition of the portrait miniature, and its distinct articulation of the viewer’s intimacy with a physically absent subject, the essay argues that Tiebout used these perceptual dynamics to foreground and interrogate the ontological vacancy of Rowson’s character. Adopting an intermedial approach to the theorization of fictionality, the essay begins by assessing the long-standing critical neglect of portraits of fictional characters among art historians, before suggesting that Tiebout’s image of Charlotte offers a way to connect the operations of visual and literary fictionality through the concept of “recognition” – which, in denoting both the process through which a picture’s subject is understood and the reconciliation of separated individuals in anagnoristic plotlines, draws our attention to questions about the nature of personal identity. Extending the investigation of this epistemological intersection between picture-making and narrative-building, the essay goes on to consider word/image relations in Tiebout’s Charlotte Temple as they pertain to the logic of “reverse ekphrasis,” the instantiation of desire and grief in portrait miniatures, and the wider culture of frontispiece engraving in early America.

Citation

Pethers, M., & Koenigs, T. (2021). Portrait Miniatures: Fictionality, Visual Culture, and the Scene of Recognition in Early National America. Early American Literature, 56(3), 755-807. https://doi.org/10.1353/eal.2021.0066

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Feb 1, 2021
Online Publication Date Oct 30, 2021
Publication Date 2021
Deposit Date Mar 25, 2021
Journal Early American Literature
Print ISSN 0012-8163
Electronic ISSN 1534-147X
Publisher University of North Carolina Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 56
Issue 3
Pages 755-807
DOI https://doi.org/10.1353/eal.2021.0066
Keywords Fictionality, referentiality, recognition, early American novel, Charlotte Temple, Susanna Rowson, Cornelius Tieboult, visual culture, portrait miniatures, engraving
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/5415395
Publisher URL https://muse.jhu.edu/article/830062