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The Material Interests of the Victorian Novel

Part of the Victorian literature & culture series
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Taking as his point of departure the competing uses of the critical term the materiality of writing, Daniel Hack turns to the past in this provocative new book to recover the ways in which the multiple aspects of writing now conjured by that term were represented and related to one another in the mid-nineteenth century.

Diverging from much contemporary criticism, he argues that attention to the writing's material components and contexts does not by itself constitute reading against the grain.

On the contrary, the Victorian discourse on authorship and the novels Hack discusses - including works by Dickens, Eliot, Thackeray, and Collins - actively investigate the significance and mutual relevance of the written word or printed word's physicality, the exchange of texts for money, the workings of signification, and the corporeality of writers, readers, and characters.

Hack shows how these investigations, which involve positioning the novel in relation to such widely denigrated forms of writing as the advertisement and the begging letter, bring into play such basic novelistic properties as sympathetic identification, narrative authority, and fictionality itself. Combining formalist and historicist critical methods in innovative fashion, Hack changes the way we think about the Victorian novel's simultaneous status as text, book, and commodity.

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Product Details
University of Virginia Press
081392345X / 9780813923451
Hardback
823.809
24/08/2005
United States
English
xi, 226 p. : ill.
24 cm
postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More