Gothic Manners and the Classic English NovelUniversity of Wisconsin Press, 1988 - Всего страниц: 235 What is it that relates Austen and Trollope, Bronte and Dickens to Eliot, James, Hardy and Ford? How do novels like Pride and Prejudice and Barchester Towers and novels like Wuthering Heights and Great Expectations become part of Middlemarch, The Portrait of a Lady, Jude the Obscure and Parade's End? For Joseph Wiesenfarth, the relationships and connections are bound up in what he calls Gothic Manners. His argument is that the salient elements of two genres, that of the novel of manners and that of the new Gothic novel, come together and form a synthesis which accounts, in good part, for the greatness of classical English fiction. |
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... passing around you - Does our education prepare us for such atrocities ? Do our laws connive at them ? Could they be perpetrated without being known , in a country like this , where social and literary inter- course is on such a footing ...
... passing around you - Does our education prepare us for such atrocities ? Do our laws connive at them ? Could they be perpetrated without being known , in a country like this , where social and literary inter- course is on such a footing ...
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... passed in a pleasant undulating world , with iron and coal everywhere underneath it . On each pleasant bank of this world is to be a beautiful mansion , with two wings ; and stable , and coach - houses ; a moderately - sized park ; a ...
... passed in a pleasant undulating world , with iron and coal everywhere underneath it . On each pleasant bank of this world is to be a beautiful mansion , with two wings ; and stable , and coach - houses ; a moderately - sized park ; a ...
Стр. 39
... passed on , and this could not happen in a situation where off- spring were common and families were tribes . True monogamy would be possible only after the end of the institution of private property because people would then marry for ...
... passed on , and this could not happen in a situation where off- spring were common and families were tribes . True monogamy would be possible only after the end of the institution of private property because people would then marry for ...
Содержание
Chapter | 8 |
Chapter 1 | 25 |
Manners as Social Exclusion | 41 |
Авторские права | |
Не показаны другие разделы: 8
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Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
Arabella Arabin Bakhtin Barchester Towers becomes Bennet Bertie bourgeois dream cardinal virtues Casaubon Catherine Linton Cathy Cathy's chapter character Christminster Christopher Darcy and Elizabeth Darcy's death Dickens Dorothea dramatizes Earnshaw Eleanor Emily Brontë English Estella Expectations father feeling finds gentleman George Eliot gives Goodwood Gothic fiction Gothic manners Gothic novel Hardy's Hareton Heathcliff heaven hell Henry James horror human Isabel Jaggers James's Jane Austen Joe's Jude the Obscure Jude's judgment justice Lacan Ladislaw Lady Catherine live lover Macmaster Madame Merle Madeline Magwitch marriage marry Middlemarch Miss Havisham moral myth of concern myth of freedom novel of manners old Gothic Osmond Pansy Parade's End passion Phillotson Pip's Portrait Pride and Prejudice Ralph riddle romantic Ruskin Satis House says sexual shows Slope social society soul Sue's takes tells things Tietjens tion Tony tradition Trollope Trollope's Valentine Victorian Warburton Wemmick wife woman words Wuthering Heights Zuleika