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Stylistic Virtue and Victorian Fiction

Author : Matthew Sussman
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 275 pages
File Size : 50,59 MB
Release : 2021-07-01
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1108967248

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An innovative approach to literary stylistic analysis that targets students and scholars of nineteenth-century literature and culture through provocative interpretations of style in Victorian novels and succinct revaluations of major figures in rhetoric, criticism, and philosophy.

Stylistic Virtue in Nineteenth-Century Fiction

Author : Matthew Benjamin Sussman
Publisher :
Page : pages
File Size : 16,19 MB
Release : 2013
Category :
ISBN :

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To many readers, the Victorian novel is synonymous with moral insight and Victorian criticism with moral philistinism. While the novel remains celebrated for its complex treatment of decision-making and sympathy, the evaluative judgments of Victorian critics have been dismissed as thematically reductive and imprecise. However, this study argues that the virtue terms that pervade Victorian discourse--words like "natural," "manly," "lucid," and "sincere"--invest sentence-level stylistic properties with ethical value because they embody aesthetic character. Rather than focus on the novel's action, characters, or themes, these "stylistic virtues" ascribe moral significance to "literariness" itself.

On Style in Victorian Fiction

Author : Daniel Tyler
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 329 pages
File Size : 29,48 MB
Release : 2022-01-06
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1108583490

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Suited to students and scholars alike, On Style in Victorian Fiction provides a timely and passionate argument for attending to the style of Victorian fiction as inseparable from meaning. Including a broad scope of major novelists from this period, the volume is indispensable for anyone working on Victorian literature.

Convalescence in the Nineteenth-Century Novel

Author : Hosanna Krienke
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 245 pages
File Size : 30,79 MB
Release : 2021-05-13
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1108957064

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Victorian Britain witnessed a resurgence of traditional convalescent caregiving. In the face of a hectic modern existence, nineteenth-century thinkers argued that all medical patients desperately required a lengthy, meandering period of recovery. Various reformers worked to extend the benefits of holistic recuperative care to seemingly unlikely groups: working-class hospital patients, insane asylum inmates, even low-ranking soldiers across the British Empire. Hosanna Krienke offers the first sustained scholarly assessment of nineteenth-century convalescent culture, revealing how interpersonal post-acute care was touted as a critical supplement to modern scientific medicine. As a method of caregiving intended to alleviate both physical and social ills, convalescence united patients of disparate social classes, disease categories, and degrees of impairment. Ultimately, this study demonstrates how novels from Bleak House to The Secret Garden draw on the unhurried timescale of convalescence as an ethical paradigm, training readers to value unfolding narratives apart from their ultimate resolutions.

Music and the Queer Body in English Literature at the Fin de Siècle

Author : Fraser Riddell
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 297 pages
File Size : 16,14 MB
Release : 2022-04-14
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1108996337

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Drawing on an ambitious range of interdisciplinary material, including literature, musical treatises and theoretical texts, Music and the Queer Body explores the central place music held for emergent queer identities in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries. Canonical writers such as Walter Pater, E. M. Forster and Virginia Woolf are discussed alongside lesser-known figures such as John Addington Symonds, Vernon Lee and Arthur Symons. Engaging with a number of historical case studies, Fraser Riddell pays particular attention to the significance of embodiment in queer musical subcultures and draws on contemporary queer theory and phenomenology to show how writers associate music with shameful, masochistic and anti-humanist subject positions. Ultimately, this study reveals how literary texts at the fin de siècle invest music with queer agency: to challenge or refuse essentialist identities, to facilitate re-conceptions of embodied subjectivity, and to present alternative sensory experiences of space and time. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.

Reductive Reading

Author : Sarah Allison
Publisher : JHU Press
Page : 185 pages
File Size : 11,64 MB
Release : 2018-06
Category : Computers
ISBN : 1421425629

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Introduction the syntax of Victorian moralizing: on choosing a proxy for style -- In defense of reading reductively -- The shockingly subtle criticism of the London Quarterly Review, 1855-1861 -- Relative clauses and the narrative present tense in George Eliot -- generalization and declamation : Elizabeth Barrett Browning's present-tense poetics -- A moral technology: speech tags in Charles Dickens's dialogue -- Conclusion : a grammar of perception