Skip to main content

Reading Text and Image in the Eighteenth Century: Diderot and the Tableau (Level 5)

Classes

Wednesday 15 January - Wednesday 26 March 2025, 7.30pm-9pm

10 sessions - Check class timetable

Overview

On this Reading Text and Image in the Eighteenth Century short course we focus on the writings of the celebrated Enlightenment philosophe Denis Diderot, who explored the complexities of the relationship between verbal and visual forms in highly original ways.  We will explore Diderot’s experimental theories of the tableau and his attempts to put these into practice in various types of fictional, educational and artistic context, including the theatre, the novel and art criticism.

The power of the image is a central preoccupation in eighteenth-century philosophy. We will consider how the relationship between word and image is a key topic in the aesthetic thought of the period and how the impact of images on human sensibility (as understood at the time) was foregrounded in a range of epistemological, moral and medical debates. 

The texts we focus on vary from year to year, but the following is a sample of some of the texts we may be studying:

  • Le Fils naturel and Entretiens sur ‘Le Fils naturel’
  • Le Père de famille
  • De la poésie dramatique
  • Éloge de Richardson
  • La Religieuse
  • Extracts from Diderot’s Salons (e.g. de 1759, 1761, 1763, 1765, 1767, 1769)
  • Extracts from the Encyclopédie

If you are interested in the literature and culture of eighteenth-century France and in text/image relations, then this short course will be of great interest. If you have already studied our Culture and Image short course, it will build on your knowledge and develop your thinking on visual culture further.  

15 credits at level 5