A stylish critique of literary attitudes towards painting, Textual
Vision explores the simultaneous rhetorical formation and empirical
fragmentation of visual reading in enlightenment Britain. Beginning with
an engaging treatment of Pope's Rape of the Lock, Timothy Erwin takes
the reader on a guided tour of the pointed allusion, apt illustration,
or the subtle appeal to the mind's eye within a wide array of genres and
texts, before bringing his linked case studies to a surprising close
with the fiction of Jane Austen. At once carefully researched,
theoretically informed and highly imaginative, Textual Vision situates
textual vision at the cultural crossroads of ancient pictura-poesis
doctrine and modernist aesthetics. It provides reliable interpretive
poles for reading enlightenment imagery, offers vivid new readings of
familiar works, and promises to invigorate the study of Restoration and
eighteenth-century visual culture.