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The art of uncertainty : probable realism and the Victorian novel

Part of the Cambridge studies in nineteenth-century literature and culture series
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The Victorian novel developed unique forms of reasoning under uncertainty-of thinking, judging, and acting in the face of partial knowledge and unclear outcome.

George Eliot, Wilkie Collins, William Thackeray, Thomas Hardy, and later Joseph Conrad drew on science, mathematics, philosophy, and the law to articulate a phenomenology of uncertainty against emergent models of prediction and decision-making.

In imaginative explorations of unsure reasoning, hesitant judgment, and makeshift action, these novelists cultivated distinctive responses to uncertainty as intellectual concern and cultural disposition, participating in the knowledge work of an era shaped by numerical approaches to the future.

Reading for uncertainty yields a rich account of the dynamics of thinking and acting, a fresh understanding of realism as a genre of the probable, and a vision of literary-critical judgment as provisional and open-ended.

Daniel Williams spotlights the value of literary art in a present marked by models and technologies of prediction.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1009436112 / 9781009436113
Hardback
07/03/2024
United Kingdom
English
346 pages.
Print on demand edition.