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Reverie, reading, and the Victorian ...
~
Gettelman, Debra Lynn.
Reverie, reading, and the Victorian novel (Charlotte Bronte, Charles Dickens, George Eliot, England).
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Reverie, reading, and the Victorian novel (Charlotte Bronte, Charles Dickens, George Eliot, England).
作者:
Gettelman, Debra Lynn.
面頁冊數:
242 p.
附註:
Adviser: Elaine Scarry.
附註:
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 66-11, Section: A, page: 4031.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International66-11A.
標題:
Literature, English.
電子資源:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3194407
ISBN:
9780542391767
Reverie, reading, and the Victorian novel (Charlotte Bronte, Charles Dickens, George Eliot, England).
Gettelman, Debra Lynn.
Reverie, reading, and the Victorian novel (Charlotte Bronte, Charles Dickens, George Eliot, England).
- 242 p.
Adviser: Elaine Scarry.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Harvard University, 2005.
The dissertation argues that this new appraisal of the reader's imagination redefined not only the reception, but the production of Victorian fiction. Charlotte Bronte, George Eliot, Charles Dickens, and Mary Elizabeth Braddon were each engaged with psychological theories circulating in the broader culture. Readerly imagining---whether rapt absorption, distracted inattention, eager prediction, or wandering consciousness---is represented and reflected upon within their fiction itself, as both a narrative resource and a disciplinary nuisance. For within Victorian novels, readers are invited to daydream while reading, to fill in the most personal and unnarratable affect of a story, while at the same time being cautioned, through the model of the characters' reveries, against undisciplined imagining that can prove more absorbing than the text itself. Through readings of Jane Eyre, Little Dorrit, Adam Bede, and The Doctor's Wife, the dissertation argues that the reader's imagination was both a supplement and a provocation that shaped Victorian fiction, as its authors confronted the fertile, if slippery, resource of their readers' minds.
ISBN: 9780542391767Subjects--Topical Terms:
212435
Literature, English.
Reverie, reading, and the Victorian novel (Charlotte Bronte, Charles Dickens, George Eliot, England).
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The dissertation argues that this new appraisal of the reader's imagination redefined not only the reception, but the production of Victorian fiction. Charlotte Bronte, George Eliot, Charles Dickens, and Mary Elizabeth Braddon were each engaged with psychological theories circulating in the broader culture. Readerly imagining---whether rapt absorption, distracted inattention, eager prediction, or wandering consciousness---is represented and reflected upon within their fiction itself, as both a narrative resource and a disciplinary nuisance. For within Victorian novels, readers are invited to daydream while reading, to fill in the most personal and unnarratable affect of a story, while at the same time being cautioned, through the model of the characters' reveries, against undisciplined imagining that can prove more absorbing than the text itself. Through readings of Jane Eyre, Little Dorrit, Adam Bede, and The Doctor's Wife, the dissertation argues that the reader's imagination was both a supplement and a provocation that shaped Victorian fiction, as its authors confronted the fertile, if slippery, resource of their readers' minds.
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This dissertation argues that nineteenth-century British fiction was profoundly shaped by its rapport with contemporary theories of the reader's imagination. Since the eighteenth century, the activity of the novel reader's mind had been likened pejoratively to one kind of imagining: daydreaming. Critics had invoked female readers' "reveries of fiction" to dismiss the unwanted creativity which novel reading stirred, while physicians and philosophers pathologized reverie as a dangerous mental state. Yet with the rise of psychology as a scientific discipline in the mid-nineteenth century---through the work of Alexander Bain, Herbert Spencer, and William Carpenter---reveries became legitimated as capsules in which the normative, not pathologized, state of consciousness could be observed. Rather than a satiric way of describing novel readers' minds, daydreams proved an actual component of reading. While the Romantic and Modernist periods have long been associated with the interiority and narrative forms characteristic of private reverie, its presence in Victorian fiction has gone nearly unexamined. Neither have studies of Victorian culture yet recognized the reader's imaginative habits as a tangible part of nineteenth-century reading history.
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