Edwardian Fiction

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Childhood in Edwardian Fiction

Author : A. Gavin,A. Humphries
Publisher : Springer
Page : 236 pages
File Size : 44,8 Mb
Release : 2008-12-17
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9780230595132

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Childhood in Edwardian Fiction by A. Gavin,A. Humphries Pdf

The first book-length look at childhood in Edwardian fiction, this book challenges assumptions that the Edwardian period was simply a continuation of the Victorian or the start of the Modern. Exploring both classics and popular fiction, the authors provide a a compelling picture of the Edwardian fictional cult of childhood.

Edwardian Fiction

Author : Jefferson Hunter
Publisher : Unknown
Page : 291 pages
File Size : 53,6 Mb
Release : 2013-10-01
Category : Electronic
ISBN : 0674499131

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Edwardian Fiction by Jefferson Hunter Pdf

Domestic Violence in Victorian and Edwardian Fiction

Author : Jina Moon
Publisher : Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Page : 220 pages
File Size : 46,5 Mb
Release : 2016-04-26
Category : Electronic
ISBN : 9781443892070

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Domestic Violence in Victorian and Edwardian Fiction by Jina Moon Pdf

This book opens the curtain on the crucial role played by Victorian and Edwardian novelists in changing views of domestic violence. Examining the mechanisms of domestic violence through the historical lenses of the law, crime, and economics, this study illuminates these novelists’ depictions of wife-battering, including scenes in which women witness their children being beaten or children witness their mothers’ beatings. This book also shows how these representations interacted with changing paradigms of masculinity and femininity at the time. Extending from the decades before the 1857 Divorce Act to the Suffrage era, the book details the changing circumstances of conjugal violence and divorce in England. William Makepeace Thackeray’s The Memoirs of Barry Lyndon, Esq. (1844) and Caroline Norton’s Stuart of Dunleath: A Story of Modern Times (1851) expose the impact of class on reactions to domestic violence. Wilkie Collins’s The Law and the Lady (1875) and Ouida’s (Marie Louise de la Ramé) Moths (1880) depict proto-New Women figures who resist domestic violence, while traditional wife figures continue to fall victim. In Mona Caird’s The Wing of Azrael (1889) and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s The Hound of the Baskervilles (1902) and “The Adventure of the Abbey Grange” (1904), protagonists exact their own justice on perpetrators of domestic violence. By the Edwardian period, it was clear that legislation alone could not solve the problems of domestic violence. Constance Maud’s No Surrender (1911) adroitly links wife-battering with public violence against suffragettes, exposing the underlying British socio-cultural system that maintained women’s subordination.

The Player Piano and the Edwardian Novel

Author : Cecilia Björkén-Nyberg
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 222 pages
File Size : 45,7 Mb
Release : 2016-03-03
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9781317021223

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The Player Piano and the Edwardian Novel by Cecilia Björkén-Nyberg Pdf

In her study of music-making in the Edwardian novel, Cecilia Björkén-Nyberg argues that the invention and development of the player piano had a significant effect on the perception, performance and appreciation of music during the period. In contrast to existing devices for producing music mechanically such as the phonograph and gramophone, the player piano granted its operator freedom of individual expression by permitting the performer to modify the tempo. Because the traditional piano was the undisputed altar of domestic and highly gendered music-making, Björkén-Nyberg suggests, the potential for intervention by the mechanical piano's operator had a subversive effect on traditional notions about the status of the musical work itself and about the people who were variously defined by their relationship to it. She examines works by Dorothy Richardson, E.M. Forster, Henry Handel Richardson, Max Beerbohm and Compton Mackenzie, among others, contending that Edwardian fiction with music as a subject undermined the prevalent antithesis, expressed in contemporary music literature, between a nineteenth-century conception of music as a means of transcendence and the increasing mechanisation of music as represented by the player piano. Her timely survey of the player piano in the context of Edwardian commercial and technical discourse draws on a rich array of archival materials to shed new light on the historically conditioned activity of music-making in early twentieth-century fiction.

Classic Victorian and Edwardian Ghost Stories

Author : Rex Collings
Publisher : Wordsworth Editions
Page : 308 pages
File Size : 54,9 Mb
Release : 2008
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 184022066X

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Classic Victorian and Edwardian Ghost Stories by Rex Collings Pdf

This is a book to be read by a blazing fire on a winter's night, with the curtains drawn close and the doors securely locked. The unquiet souls of the dead, both as fictional creations and as 'real' apparitions, roam the pages of this haunting selection of ghost stories by Rex Collings. Some of these stories are classics while others are lesser-known gems unearthed from this vintage era of tales of the supernatural. There are stories from distant lands - 'Fisher's Ghost' by John Lang is set in Australia and 'A Ghostly Manifestation' by 'A Clergyman' is set in Calcutta. In this selection, Sir Walter Scott (a Victorian in spirit if not in fact), keeps company with Edgar Allen Poe, Sheridan Le Fanu and other illustrious masters of the genre.

Edwardian Fiction

Author : Sandra Kemp,Charlotte Mitchell,David Trotter
Publisher : Oxford University Press, USA
Page : 472 pages
File Size : 42,6 Mb
Release : 1997
Category : Fiction
ISBN : STANFORD:36105019318257

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Edwardian Fiction by Sandra Kemp,Charlotte Mitchell,David Trotter Pdf

Contains some 1,000 entries on well-known and obscure authors, individual works, and genres, encompassing adult's and children's fiction and some work by authors from other English-speaking countries. About half of the 800 authors profiled are women. Includes a chronology and an index of pseudonyms. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

Realism, Form, and Representation in the Edwardian Novel

Author : Charlotte Jones
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 332 pages
File Size : 49,6 Mb
Release : 2021-01-07
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9780192599810

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Realism, Form, and Representation in the Edwardian Novel by Charlotte Jones Pdf

The real represents to my perception the things that we cannot possibly not know, sooner or later, in one way or another', wrote Henry James in 1907. This description, riven with double negatives, hesitation, and uncertainty, encapsulates the epistemological difficulties of realism, for underlying its narrative and descriptive apparatus as an aesthetic mode lies a philosophical quandary. What grounds the 'real' of the realist novel? What kind of perception is required to validate the experience of reality? How does the realist novel represent the difficulty of knowing? What comes to the fore in James's account, as in so many, is how the forms of realism are constituted by a relation to unknowing, absence, and ineffability. Realism, Form, and Representation in the Edwardian Novel recovers a neglected literary history centred on the intricate relationship between fictional representation and philosophical commitment. It asks how—or if—we can conceptualize realist novels when the objects of their representational intentions are realities that might exist beyond what is empirically verifiable by sense data or analytically verifiable by logic, and are thus irreducible to conceptual schemes or linguistic practices—a formulation Charlotte Jones refers to as 'synthetic realism'. In new readings of Edwardian novels including Conrad's Nostromo and The Secret Agent, Wells's Tono-Bungay, and Ford's The Good Soldier, this volume revises and reconsiders key elements of realist novel theory—metaphor and metonymy; character interiority; the insignificant detail; omniscient narration and free indirect discourse; causal linearity—to uncover the representational strategies by which realist writers grapple with the recalcitrance of reality as a referential anchor, and seek to give form to the force, opacity, and uncertain scope of realities that may lie beyond the material. In restoring a metaphysical dimension to the realist novel's imaginary, Realism, Form, and Representation in the Edwardian Novel offers a new conceptualization of realism both within early twentieth-century literary culture and as a transhistorical mode of representation.

The Flirt's Tragedy

Author : Richard A. Kaye
Publisher : University of Virginia Press
Page : 246 pages
File Size : 52,5 Mb
Release : 2002-05-29
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9780813922003

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The Flirt's Tragedy by Richard A. Kaye Pdf

In the flirtation plots of novels by Jane Austen, Charlotte Brontë, and W. M. Thackeray, heroines learn sociability through competition with naughty coquette-doubles. In the writing of George Eliot and Thomas Hardy, flirting harbors potentially tragic consequences, a perilous game then adapted by male flirts in the novels of Oscar Wilde and Henry James. In revising Gustave Flaubert’s Sentimental Education in The Age of Innocence, Edith Wharton critiques the nineteenth-century European novel as morbidly obsessed with deferred desires. Finally, in works by D. H. Lawrence and E. M. Forster, flirtation comes to reshape the modernist representation of homoerotic relations. In The Flirt’s Tragedy: Desire without End in Victorian and Edwardian Fiction, Richard Kaye makes a case for flirtation as a unique, neglected species of eros that finds its deepest, most elaborately sustained fulfillment in the nineteenth-century and early twentieth-century novel. The author examines flirtation in major British, French, and American texts to demonstrate how the changing aesthetic of such fiction fastened on flirtatious desire as a paramount subject for distinctly novelistic inquiry. The novel, he argues, accentuated questions of ambiguity and ambivalence on which an erotics of deliberate imprecision thrived. But the impact of flirtation was not only formal. Kaye views coquetry as an arena of freedom built on a dialectic of simultaneous consent and refusal, as well as an expression of "managed desire," a risky display of female power, and a cagey avenue for the expression of dissident sexualities. Through coquetry, novelists offered their response to important scientific and social changes and to the rise of the metropolis as a realm of increasingly transient amorous relations. Challenging current trends in gender, post-gender, and queer-theory criticism, and considering texts as diverse as Darwin’s The Descent of Man and Gilbert and Sullivan’s The Mikado, Kaye insists that critical appraisals of Victorian and Edwardian fiction must move beyond existing paradigms defining considerations of flirtation in the novel. The Flirt’s Tragedy offers a lively, revisionary, often startling assessment of nineteenth-century fiction that will alter our understanding of the history of the novel.

Reimagining Dinosaurs in Late Victorian and Edwardian Literature

Author : Richard Fallon
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 305 pages
File Size : 47,9 Mb
Release : 2021-11-04
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9781108834001

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Reimagining Dinosaurs in Late Victorian and Edwardian Literature by Richard Fallon Pdf

Reimagining Dinosaurs argues that transatlantic popular literature was critical for transforming the dinosaur into a cultural icon between 1880 and 1920

The Player Piano and the Edwardian Novel

Author : Ms Cecilia Björkén-Nyberg
Publisher : Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.
Page : 223 pages
File Size : 40,9 Mb
Release : 2015-06-28
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9781472439987

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The Player Piano and the Edwardian Novel by Ms Cecilia Björkén-Nyberg Pdf

In her study of music-making in the Edwardian novel, Cecilia Björkén-Nyberg examines works by authors such as Dorothy Richardson, E.M. Forster, Henry Handel Richardson, and Compton Mackenzie to show that the invention and development of the player piano had a significant effect on the perception, performance and appreciation of music during the period. She draws on archival materials to place the player piano in the context of Edwardian commercial and technical discourse.

Edwardian Fiction

Author : Jefferson Hunter
Publisher : Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press
Page : 304 pages
File Size : 51,5 Mb
Release : 1982
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : UOM:39015009281331

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Edwardian Fiction by Jefferson Hunter Pdf

A College of Magics

Author : Caroline Stevermer
Publisher : Macmillan
Page : 480 pages
File Size : 49,8 Mb
Release : 2002-10-13
Category : Juvenile Fiction
ISBN : 9781466819481

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A College of Magics by Caroline Stevermer Pdf

Teenager Faris Nallaneen is the heir to the small northern dukedom of Galazon. Too young still to claim her title, her despotic Uncle Brinker has ruled in her place. Now he demands she be sent to Greenlaw College. For her benefit he insists. To keep me out of the way, more like it! But Greenlaw is not just any school-as Faris and her new best friend Jane discover. At Greenlaw students major in . . . magic. But it's not all fun and games. When Faris makes an enemy of classmate Menary of Aravill, life could get downright . . . deadly. At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.

The Cambridge Companion to the Twentieth-Century English Novel

Author : Robert L. Caserio
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 128 pages
File Size : 40,7 Mb
Release : 2009-04-30
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9781139828338

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The Cambridge Companion to the Twentieth-Century English Novel by Robert L. Caserio Pdf

The twentieth-century English novel encompasses a vast body of work, and one of the most important and most widely read genres of literature. Balancing close readings of particular novels with a comprehensive survey of the last century of published fiction, this Companion introduces readers to more than a hundred major and minor novelists. It demonstrates continuities in novel-writing that bridge the century's pre- and post-War halves and presents leading critical ideas about English fiction's themes and forms. The essays examine the endurance of modernist style throughout the century, the role of nationality and the contested role of the English language in all its forms, and the relationships between realism and other fictional modes: fantasy, romance, science fiction. Students, scholars and readers will find this Companion an indispensable guide to the history of the English novel.

Where Angels Fear to Tread

Author : E. M. Forster
Publisher : East West Studio
Page : 145 pages
File Size : 49,5 Mb
Release : 2020-06-11
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 8210379456XXX

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Where Angels Fear to Tread by E. M. Forster Pdf

Where Angels Fear to Tread (1905) is a novel by E. M. Forster. The title comes from a line in Alexander Pope's An Essay on Criticism: "For fools rush in where angels fear to tread".

Rebel Women

Author : Jane Eldridge Miller
Publisher : University of Chicago Press
Page : 252 pages
File Size : 42,6 Mb
Release : 1997-03-15
Category : History
ISBN : 0226526771

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Rebel Women by Jane Eldridge Miller Pdf

With the rise of women's suffrage, challenges to marriage and divorce laws, and expanding opportunities for education and employment for women, the early years of the twentieth century were a time of social revolution. Examining British novels written in 1890-1914, Jane Eldridge Miller demonstrates how these social, legal, and economic changes rendered the traditional narratives of romantic desire and marital closure inadequate, forcing Edwardian novelists to counter the limitations and ideological implications of those narratives with innovative strategies. The original and provocative novels that resulted depict the experiences of modern women with unprecedented variety, specificity, and frankness. Rebel Women is a major re-evaluation of Edwardian fiction and a significant contribution to literary history and criticism. "Miller's is the best account we have, not only of Edwardian women novelists, but of early 20th-century women novelists; the measure of her achievement is that the distinction no longer seems workable." —David Trotter, The London Review of Books