The Pilgrim's Scrip
Author : George Meredith
Publisher :
Page : 324 pages
File Size : 10,36 MB
Release : 1888
Category : English poetry
ISBN :
Author : George Meredith
Publisher :
Page : 324 pages
File Size : 10,36 MB
Release : 1888
Category : English poetry
ISBN :
Author : Nicholas Dames
Publisher : Oxford University Press, USA
Page : 288 pages
File Size : 37,32 MB
Release : 2007-09-27
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 0199208964
How did the Victorians read novels? Nicholas Dames answers that deceptively simple question by revealing a now-forgotten range of nineteenth-century theories of the novel, a range based in a study of human physiology during the act of reading, He demonstrates the ways in which the Victorians thought they read, and uncovers surprising responses to the question of what might have transpired in the minds and bodies of readers of Victorian fiction. His detailed studies of novelcritics who were also interested in neurological science, combined with readings of novels by Thackeray, Eliot, Meredith, and Gissing, propose a vision of the Victorian novel-reader as far from the quietly immersed being we now imagine - as instead a reader whose nervous system was addressed, attacked, andsoothed by authors newly aware of the neural operations of their public. Rich in unexpected intersections, from the British response to Wagnerian opera to the birth of speed-reading in the late nineteenth century, The Physiology of the Novel challenges our assumptions about what novel-reading once did, and still does, to the individual reader, and provides new answers to the question of how novels influenced a culture's way of reading, responding, and feeling.
Author : Leah Price
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 236 pages
File Size : 29,23 MB
Release : 2003-07-17
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9780521539395
The Anthology and the Rise of the Novel, first published in 2000, brings together two traditionally antagonistic fields, book history and narrative theory, to challenge established theories of 'the rise of the novel'. Leah Price shows that far from leveling class or gender distinctions, as has long been claimed, the novel has consistently located them within its own audience. Shedding new light on Richardson and Radcliffe, Scott and George Eliot, this book asks why the epistolary novel disappeared, how the book review emerged, why eighteenth-century abridgers designed their books for women while Victorian publishers marketed them to men, and how editors' reproduction of old texts has shaped authors' production of new ones. This innovative study will change the way we think not just about the history of reading, but about the genealogy of the canon wars, the future of intellectual property, and the role that anthologies play in our own classrooms.
Author : Neil Roberts
Publisher : Springer
Page : 294 pages
File Size : 35,21 MB
Release : 1997-05-13
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1349254649
Meredith is a novelist whom many readers have discovered with excitement, drawn to his radical portrayal of social and personal relations, especially of gender. Neil Robert's book is the first full-length study for ten years, and is the first to examine the novels in the light of modern literary theory, especially the work of Mikhail Bakhtin, showing that Meredith is a writer who engages profoundly with the ideological discourses of his time and is a still not fully discovered precursor of the modernist novel.
Author : Maurice Buxton Forman
Publisher :
Page : 336 pages
File Size : 41,99 MB
Release : 1924
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Fred A. A. Smith
Publisher :
Page : 92 pages
File Size : 41,92 MB
Release : 1893
Category : Mouth breathing
ISBN :
Author : Richard Le Gallienne
Publisher :
Page : 270 pages
File Size : 15,30 MB
Release : 1890
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Alice Crossley
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 415 pages
File Size : 30,48 MB
Release : 2018-07-06
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1317102126
Focusing on works by George Meredith, W. M. Thackeray, and Anthony Trollope, Alice Crossley examines the emergence of adolescence in the mid-Victorian period as a distinct form of experience. Adolescence, Crossley shows, appears as a discrete category of identity that draws on but is nonetheless distinguishable from other masculine types. Important more as a stage of psychological awareness and maturation than as a period of biological youth, Crossley argues that the plasticity of male adolescence provides Meredith, Thackeray, and Trollope with opportunities for self-reflection and social criticism while also working as a paradigm for narrative and imaginative inquiry about motivation, egotism, emotional and physical relationships, and the possibilities of self-creation. Adolescence emerges as a crucial stage of individual growth, adopted by these authors in order to reflect more fully on cultural and personal anxieties about manliness. The centrality of male youth in these authors’ novels, Crossley demonstrates, repositions age-consciousness as an integral part of nineteenth-century debates about masculine heterogeneity.
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 606 pages
File Size : 35,51 MB
Release : 1888
Category : Library catalogs
ISBN :
Consists of "accessions" and "books in foreign languages".
Author : Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County
Publisher :
Page : 158 pages
File Size : 23,62 MB
Release : 1889
Category : Classified catalogs
ISBN :