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Routledge Studies in Nineteenth Century Literature


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A Female Poetics of Empire From Eliot to Woolf

A Female Poetics of Empire: From Eliot to Woolf

1st Edition

By Julia Kuehn
August 23, 2018

Many well-known male writers produced fictions about colonial spaces and discussed the advantages of realism over romance, and vice versa, in the ‘art of fiction’ debate of the 1880s; but how did female writers contribute to colonial fiction? This volume links fictional, non-fictional and ...

A Critical Reappraisal of the Writings of Francis Sylvester Mahony

A Critical Reappraisal of the Writings of Francis Sylvester Mahony

1st Edition

By Fergus Dunne
August 08, 2018

This book resituates Francis Sylvester Mahony in an early nineteenth-century literary-historical context, counteracting the efforts of twentieth-century literary historians to obscure his contribution to the emergence of a distinctive Irish Catholic fiction in English. This volume re-explores his ...

Gothic Peregrinations The Unexplored and Re-explored Territories

Gothic Peregrinations: The Unexplored and Re-explored Territories

1st Edition

By Agnieszka Lowczanin, Katarzyna Malecka
July 03, 2018

For over two hundred years, the Gothic has remained fixed in the European and American imaginations, steadily securing its position as a global cultural mode in recent decades. The globalization of Gothic studies has resulted in the proliferation of new critical concepts and a growing academic ...

Sensational Deviance Disability in Nineteenth-Century Sensation Fiction

Sensational Deviance: Disability in Nineteenth-Century Sensation Fiction

1st Edition

By Heidi Logan
July 03, 2018

Sensational Deviance: Disability in Nineteenth-Century Sensation Fiction investigates the representation of disability in fictional works by the leading Victorian sensation novelists Wilkie Collins and Mary Elizabeth Braddon, exploring how disability acts as a major element in the shaping of the ...

Mark X Who Killed Huck Finn’s Father?

Mark X: Who Killed Huck Finn’s Father?

1st Edition

By Yasuhiro Takeuchi
June 08, 2018

In the summer of 1876, Mark Twain started to write Adventures of Huckleberry Finn as a detective novel surrounding the murder of Huck’s father, Pap Finn. The case is unresolved in the novel as it exists today, but Twain had already planted the clue to the identity of the killer. It is not the ...

Wilde’s Other Worlds

Wilde’s Other Worlds

1st Edition

By Michael F. Davis, Petra Dierkes-Thrun
May 17, 2018

Taking its cue from Baudelaire’s important essay "The Painter of Modern Life," in which Baudelaire imagines the modern artist as a "man of the world," this collection of essays presents Oscar Wilde as a "man of the world" who eschewed provincial concerns, cultural conventions, and narrow national ...

Writing Place Mimesis, Subjectivity and Imagination in the Works of George Gissing

Writing Place: Mimesis, Subjectivity and Imagination in the Works of George Gissing

1st Edition

By Rebecca Hutcheon
February 20, 2018

Exploring a hitherto neglected field, Writing Place: Mimesis, Subjectivity and Imagination in the Works of George Gissing is the first monograph to consider the works of George Gissing (1857-1903) in light of the ‘spatial turn’. By exploring how objectivity and subjectivity interact in his work, ...

Inventing the Popular Printing, Politics, and Poetics

Inventing the Popular: Printing, Politics, and Poetics

1st Edition

By Bettina R. Lerner
February 15, 2018

Inventing the Popular: Working-Class Literature and Culture in Nineteenth-Century France explores texts written, published and disseminated by a politically and socially active group of working-class writers during the first half of the nineteenth century. Through a network of exchanges featuring ...

Melville and the Question of Meaning

Melville and the Question of Meaning

1st Edition

By David Faflik
January 24, 2018

This rich volume of essays restores meaning itself as the focal point of one of our most thoughtful modern writers, Herman Melville. Melville and the Question of Meaning thinks about thinking in Melville. For if Melville’s concerns with interpretation (the contributors to one recent collection ...

Jane Austen’s Geographies

Jane Austen’s Geographies

1st Edition

Edited By Robert Clark
December 01, 2017

When Jane Austen represented the ideal subject for a novel as "three or four families in a country village", rather than encouraging a narrow range of reference she may have meant that a tight focus was the best way of understanding the wider world. The essays in this collection research the ...

Vision and Character Physiognomics and the English Realist Novel

Vision and Character: Physiognomics and the English Realist Novel

1st Edition

By Eike Kronshage
November 17, 2017

As readers, we develop an impression of characters and their settings in a novel based on the author’s description of their physical characteristics and surroundings. This process, known as physiognomy, can be seen throughout history including in the English Realist novels of the 19th and 20th ...

Hardy Deconstructing Hardy A Derridean Reading of Thomas Hardy’s Poetry

Hardy Deconstructing Hardy: A Derridean Reading of Thomas Hardy’s Poetry

1st Edition

By Nilüfer Özgür
November 08, 2017

Hardy Deconstructing Hardy aims to add a new dimension of research which has been partly overlooked—a Derridean, Deconstructive reading of Hardy‘s poetry. Analyzing thirty-four popular and less popular poems by Hardy, this volume challenges current references to Derridean Deconstructionism. While...

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