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Victorian Literary Cultures

Studies in Textual Subversion
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Victorian Literary Cultures: Studies in Textual Subversion provides readers with close textual analyses regarding the role of subversive acts or tendencies in Victorian literature. By drawing clear cultural contexts for the works under review-including such canonical texts as Dracula, Jane Eyre, Middlemarch, and stories featuring Sherlock Holmes-the critics in this anthology offer groundbreaking studies of subversion as a literary motif. For some late nineteenth-century British novelists, subversion was a central aspect of their writerly existence. Although-or perhaps because-most Victorian authors composed their works for a general and mixed audience, many writers employed strategies designed to subvert genteel expectations. In addition to using coded and oblique subject matter, such figures also hid their transgressive material "in plain sight." While some writers sought to critique, and even destabilize, their society, others juxtaposed subversive themes and aesthetics negatively with communal norms in hopes of quashing progressive agendas.
Acknowledgments Introduction: Subversive Literary Cultures by Kenneth Womack I. Subversive Women Chapter 1: The Mysterious Identity of Helen Dickens, Victorian Novelist by Troy J. Bassett Chapter 2: Moonrise and the Ascent of Eve, the Woman Titan: Charlotte Bronte's Epiphanies of the Fourfold Elemental Feminine by Martin Bidney Chapter 3: Condoning Adultery: Problems of Marriage and Divorce in George Eliot's Life and Writing by Nancy Henry II. Subversive Ideologies Chapter 4: Unraveling Orientalism: Dawe's "Yellow and White" by James M. Decker Chapter 5: "A Familiar Kinde of Chastisement": Fasting in the Nineteenth-Century by Joseph Lennon Chapter 6: The Effect of Emerging New Media on Book Publishing: Lessons from the Origins of Cross Media Storytelling in the Early Twentieth Century for Contemporary Transmedia Researchers by Alexis Weedon Chapter 7: "And this also has been one of the dark places of the earth": Reading Levinasian Ethics and Literary Impressionism in Conrad's Heart of Darkness by Kenneth Womack III. Subversive Genres Chapter 8: "Count Me In": Comedy in Dracula by Ira B. Nadel Chapter 9: "The Seasoned Spirit of the Cunning Reader": The Textual Subversions of The Turn of the Screw by Ruth Robbins Chapter 10: "Fallen" Clergymen: The Wages of Sin in Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter, Charles Reade's The Cloister and the Hearth, and Henry Arthur Jones's Michael and His Lost Angel by Jeanette Shumaker Chapter 11: Sherlock Holmes: The Criminal in the Detective by Joseph Wiesenfarth Index About the Editors and Contributors
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