Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/17725
Title: | "The Fascination of What's Difficult": Browning and MacCallum's Classroom | Contributor(s): | McDonell, Jennifer (author) | Publication Date: | 2014 | DOI: | 10.1215/00267929-2416599 | Handle Link: | https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/17725 | Abstract: | The installation of Browning studies in the early Australian academy challenges the dominant narrative that the rise of English was underpinned by a modernist doxa predicated on notions of a historical break - with the Victorians in particular. Sir Mungo William MacCallum, the first professor of literature at the University of Sydney (and a figure central to the direction of the humanities academy in Australia), taught Victorian literature, including Browning, from the 1890s. MacCallum's public lectures, like his pedagogy, aimed to convert a primary obstacle for many readers of Browning - his difficulty - into an argument for the value of interpretative labor that not only continued a tradition in nineteenth-century Browning criticism of emphasizing the active cooperation of reader and interpreter but also transferred the idea of "discipline," formerly associated with the classics, especially Latin, to the study of literature in the vernacular. By examining the complex reticulations of disciplinarity and publicness over a contested author in an institutional site at the periphery of the global network that was the British Empire, this essay questions prevailing periodizations and categories of genre and style that diasporic, comparative classicists like MacCallum worked without. | Publication Type: | Journal Article | Source of Publication: | Modern Language Quarterly, 75(2), p. 193-214 | Publisher: | Duke University Press | Place of Publication: | United States of America | ISSN: | 1527-1943 0026-7929 |
Fields of Research (FoR) 2008: | 130103 Higher Education | Fields of Research (FoR) 2020: | 390303 Higher education | Socio-Economic Objective (SEO) 2008: | 930102 Learner and Learning Processes 950503 Understanding Australias Past |
Socio-Economic Objective (SEO) 2020: | 130703 Understanding Australia’s past | Peer Reviewed: | Yes | HERDC Category Description: | C1 Refereed Article in a Scholarly Journal |
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Appears in Collections: | Journal Article School of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences |
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