Class in Late-Victorian Britain: The Narrative Concern with Social Hierarchy and Its RepresentationCambria Press, 2007 - 175 頁 This book enacts a literary-historical analysis of some of the major issue concerning the representation and contingencies of class in popular and lesser known late-Victorian works. The book is groundbreaking in its close and historically rooted analysis of the paradigmatic ways of thinking about class and narrative at the close of the nineteenth century in Britain. Included in the analysis of the book are discussions of popular writers such as Anthony Trollope, Thomas Hardy, Somerset Maugham, Jack London, George Moore, and H.G. Wells as well as lesser known--though once popular--writers such as Sir Walter Besant, Arthur Morrison, and Margaret Harkness. This book will be a valuable resource for students and scholars of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century literature. It will also be of interest to scholars of Victorian literature who are interested in the social and historical aspects of literary and artistic representation. |
內容
Performance Anxiety and Class | 1 |
Cultural Paternalism in the East End of London | 19 |
Socialist Paternalism Margaret Harkness | 43 |
著作權所有 | |
6 個其他區段未顯示
其他版本 - 查看全部
常見字詞
Abyss according action aesthetic allows Angel appears attempt becomes believed Besant capital chapter character Claverings clear codes concerning Conditions consciousness course critical critique cultural d'Urbervilles described desire determined distinctions dominant East End economic effect essentially Esther example experience exploration fact function Harkness historical hopes idea ideology illustrate important issues Jago kind late-Victorian limitations live Liza London marriage material means middle middle-class moral Morrison's narration narrative nature never novel object offers paternalism perception performance perhaps perspective political Polly poor position poverty practices primarily primary problems question reality reification relations relationship representation represented respectability response result reveals seeks sense simply slum slum narratives social society solution Sorts status structure subjectivity suggests symbolic Tess things throughout transformation Trollope Trollope's ultimately various Victorian wealth woman women working-class writes York