Dickens to Hardy 1837-1884: The Novel, the Past and Cultural Memory in the Nineteenth CenturyBloomsbury Academic, 1 de set. de 2007 - 304 páginas This authoritative survey examines how the Victorian middle-classes perceived themselves, through analyses of the literature of the period. Asking how the middle classes distinguished themselves from their forbears, Julian Wolfreys reads in detail major novels by: |
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... past , present and future overlap ' , then The Moonstone offers itself as a text with no consolations recuperable from the past . Distinct from either the demand that we remember expressed by Dickens in The Pickwick Papers , or the ...
... past ' ( Beer 1989 , 4 ) that informs the historicization of those signals by which a history is told and received , if at all . - - That difference may be recognized in broad terms , for example in the reading of Middlemarch as an ...
... past as the subjective , historical experience of the world . What cannot be recovered is precisely the past , and the memory's ability to bring back , to dis - cover what is hidden about the nature of the past - that it is only ...
Conteúdo
The Posthumous | 13 |
Temporal and visual modalities | 19 |
Phantasms of experience or the mechanism of | 26 |
Direitos autorais | |
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Dickens to Hardy 1837-1884: The Novel, the Past and Cultural Memory in the ... Julian Wolfreys Visualização parcial - 2007 |
Dickens to Hardy 1837-1884: The Novel, the Past and Cultural Memory in the ... Julian Wolfreys Visualização parcial - 2007 |