ECLS Research seminar
We run a series of seminars intended to provide a forum for discussion of literary research projects underway both within and outside of the department. The programme timetable and schedule changes annually.
Research Seminar - Dr. Corey McEleney
鈥淒evils in the Details: Midsummer Madness in Victorian Bedlam鈥
Shakespeare,鈥 says a character in James Joyce鈥檚 Ulysses, 鈥渋s the
happy hunting ground of all minds that have lost their
balance.鈥 Why have Shakespeare鈥檚 poems and plays become
magnets for madness, attracting obsessive readers and inspiring
excessive readings? What forms does this madness take? And,
above all, what can these eccentric engagements with
Shakespeare teach us about the irrationality inherent in the act
of reading itself? This talk will explore these questions by
focusing on the Victorian painter Richard Dadd. A promising
artist trained at the Royal Academy of Arts, Dadd was
institutionalized in the Bethlem Royal Hospital (Bedlam) after
murdering his father. While confined in Bedlam, Dadd
produced a couple of highly detailed paintings inspired by A
Midsummer Night鈥檚 Dream. I contrast the disorienting form of
these works with the Midsummer paintings he produced prior
to his institutionalization in order to show how Dadd鈥檚
commitment to microscopic detail not only exhibits the
profound links between madness and the detail but also, in the
process, defamiliarizes Shakespeare鈥檚 play in ways that
anticipate 20th-century interpretations of its darker and more
discordant aspects.
Corey McEleney is an Associate Professor of English and
Film Studies at Fordham University. He is the author of
Futile Pleasures: Early Modern Literature and the Limits of
Utility (Fordham, 2017), and his essays can be found in ELH,
GLQ, differences, as well as in the collections New Formalisms
and Literary Theory (Palgrave 2013) and The Age of Thomas
Nashe (Ashgate 2013). He is currently working on a new book
project tentatively titled The Art of Overanalyzing
