Elizabeth Helsinger

Biography

Elizabeth Helsinger has long been fascinated with the interplay between literature and other arts. Her first book (1982) focused on art and social criticism of the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries (Ruskin, Hazlitt, Baudelaire, Pater): on the aesthetic or social assumptions that writers on the arts helped to formulate and the art that shaped their and their readers' sensibilities. Reading became a central term, as she studied how these critics borrow from and in turn shape techniques of looking and of more literary reading and interpretation. A second book (1997) studied landscape as an especially interesting aspect of the shared literary and visual culture of the first half of the nineteenth century—and as the site of competing, often highly politicized constructions of Englishness. She has also published on the later nineteenth-century women's movement.

More recent research and writing has focused on poetry, particularly the Pre-Raphaelites and later nineteenth-century poets (Swinburne, Meynell, Michael Field, Hardy). One book (2008) examined the work of poet-artists William Morris and Dante Gabriel Rossetti, as a way of reconsidering questions of history, poetics, and the material cultures of later nineteenth-century Britain. Another book (2015) considered poetry's relations with song in the work of Rossetti, Morris, Christina Rossetti, and Swinburne (as well as Emily Brontë, Tennyson,and Gerard Manly Hopkins). Recent and forthcoming articles study Rossetti's visual and verbal work on Dante; gardens in painting; the ballad revival and nineteenth-century poets including Tennyson and Swinburne, William Morris and the idea of (literary) ornament, Blake and the Pre-Raphaelites, and late nineteenth-century women poets (particularly Alice Meynell and Michael Field). She is also working on a longer project about the history of conversing in verse.

Her teaching ranges more widely across genres and periods. She takes for domain of inquiry the long nineteenth century, from c. 1770 to 1910. Romantic and Victorian poetry, fiction, and non-fiction prose and painting, illustrated books, other arts of design, and song are central topics, often starting in the late eighteenth century or reaching into the early twentieth. She has also taught courses on the social history and literary production of 19th century women; on the relations between historiography and historical (and realist) fiction; on the problems of national representation in the early and mid-Victorian years; on image-text relations both more generally and with specific reference to particular topics.

Publications

Poetry and the Thought of Song in Nineteenth-Century Britain

The University of Virginia Press
,
2015

The Writing of Modern Life: the Etching Revival in France, Britain, and the U.S., 1850-1940 

Editor, The University of Chicago Press
,
2008

Poetry and the Pre-Raphaelite Arts: William Morris and Dante Gabriel Rossetti 

Yale University Press
,
2008

Rural Scenes and National Representation, Britain 1815-1850 

Princeton University Press
,
1997

The Woman Question: Society and Literature in Britain and America, 1837-1883

co-authored with Robin Sheets and William Veeder, 3 vols., Garland, 1983, and The University of Chicago Press
,
1989

Profiles

Andrei Pop
Andrei Pop
Modern Art and Aesthetics
Department Chair
CWAC 162 | Tuesdays 1-2pm or by appointment.
773.702.0278
Niall Atkinson
Niall Atkinson
Medieval and Renaissance Architecture and Urban History
CWAC 260
773.702.0270
Wei-Cheng Lin
Wei-Cheng Lin
Chinese Art and Architecture
Architectural Studies Advisor
CWAC 268 | Office Hours: Wednesdays 9-10am and 12-1pm
773.702.0268
2006-07
Iowa State University
Assistant Professor, East Asian Art and Architecture
Potters Wheel
Richard Neer
Ancient Greek Art and Architecture
CWAC 259
773.702.5890
Megan Sullivan
Megan Sullivan
Modern and Contemporary Latin American Art
CWAC 272
773.702.5126