Names and Stories: Emilia Dilke and Victorian Culture
Autor Kali Israelen Limba Engleză Paperback – noi 2002
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Oxford University Press – noi 2002 | 240.82 lei 6-8 săpt. | |
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Oxford University Press – 25 feb 1999 | 820.89 lei 32-37 zile |
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780195158199
ISBN-10: 0195158199
Pagini: 384
Ilustrații: 1 b/w halftone
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.56 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0195158199
Pagini: 384
Ilustrații: 1 b/w halftone
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.56 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
"Kali Israel's Names and Stories contributes importantly to the nascent genre of historiographic biography....[Here], Dilke's life is treated for the first time as part of a sustained, historically aware, and critically self-conscious process of representation....Israel accomplishes her stated aims with clarity and often brilliance, using her study of Dilke's life to embark on carefully mapped excursions into various topics related to Victorian spiritual, cultural, and political life."--Victorian Studies
"The book is not merely biographical, but is rich in literary criticism, aesthetic history, and cultural inquiry as it investigates the full spectrum of nineteenth-century British thought and custom."--Michigan Alumnus Magazine
"This is a remarkable work of interdisciplinary scholarship. By exploring narrative representations of the life of the extraordinary Victorian Emilia Dilke, Professor Israel upsets what is often the most conservative form of history writing--biography. This is 'biographical' writing in a truly postmodern key. The author uses Dilke as a complex site for addressing important questions about gender, class, politics, social performance, the body, erotic desire, and how we make historical sense of such things. Kali Israel's study is controversial in the best sense, inviting readers to rethink methods of interpretation and understanding."--James Epstein, Professor of History, Vanderbilt University
"Names and Stories is a fruitful alliance of detailed and generous primary-source research with sophisticated post-modern readings of text; of traditional and 'literary turn' history; and of biography and cultural history. Part of the new school of feminist life-story writing which refuses a continuous, unified recital of its subject, Israel's book on Emilia Dilke (in all her incarnations) is nonetheless wonderfully thorough at retrieving the thousands of texts (including nearly a dozen novels, beginning with Middlemarch) woven around her life. I read it with fascination."--Ellen Ross, Professor of History and Women's Studies, Ramapo College of New Jersey
"Israel has produced an unusual treatment of the life of Lady Emilia Dilke, an actor of importance and interest to scholars of Victorian high politics, art, social reform, and feminism. Much more than a 'life and times of...' work, this book demonstrates the integral, textual connections between the stories Dilke told about herself and others and the political, personal, private, cultural, and social life in Victorian Britain. Based upon a vast array of little-used primary materials, it offers an original and stimulating interpretation of both Emilia Dilke's life stories and the use of her life stories to achieve other ends. Israel is among a select group of scholars who seek to broaden and open the possibilities of biography. This is an impressive achievement."--Susan K. Kent, Professor of History, University of Colorado
"This is an impressive and intriguing post-modernist biographical disquisition providing much insight into the life and world of Francis Pattison/Emilia Dilke, art historian, trade unionist, fictionalist, and wife of two problematical Victorians, Mark Pattison and Sir Charles Dilke. The study is set within a rich palimpsest of nineteenth-century professional life and sexuality."--Peter Stansky, Stanford University
"Literary critics will find that Kali Israel's discussion of the exceptional Emilia Pattison provides new insights into the ways in which narratives inform the best type of cultural history. Israel's exemplary study reveals that material lives comprise both 'names' and 'stories', all involving conflicting kinds of personal, political, and social narration."--Joseph Bristow, University of California at Los Angeles
"Israel offers not only a theoretically rich analysis of her tasks but also a series of portraits and stories which accumulate without ever giving definitive shape to the Emilia Dilke that her culture and ours imagine her to be...a particularly innovative biography."--Studies in English Literature
"Names and Stories is scholarly, ambitious in scope, rich in allusion, and likely to appeal to readers from different fields, including social historians, art historians, and scholars interested in Victorian periodicals or the theory of life-writing."--Journal of Modern History
"Confronts conventional ways to tell stories, to report biography, or to make meaning of a life." World History
"The book is not merely biographical, but is rich in literary criticism, aesthetic history, and cultural inquiry as it investigates the full spectrum of nineteenth-century British thought and custom."--Michigan Alumnus Magazine
"This is a remarkable work of interdisciplinary scholarship. By exploring narrative representations of the life of the extraordinary Victorian Emilia Dilke, Professor Israel upsets what is often the most conservative form of history writing--biography. This is 'biographical' writing in a truly postmodern key. The author uses Dilke as a complex site for addressing important questions about gender, class, politics, social performance, the body, erotic desire, and how we make historical sense of such things. Kali Israel's study is controversial in the best sense, inviting readers to rethink methods of interpretation and understanding."--James Epstein, Professor of History, Vanderbilt University
"Names and Stories is a fruitful alliance of detailed and generous primary-source research with sophisticated post-modern readings of text; of traditional and 'literary turn' history; and of biography and cultural history. Part of the new school of feminist life-story writing which refuses a continuous, unified recital of its subject, Israel's book on Emilia Dilke (in all her incarnations) is nonetheless wonderfully thorough at retrieving the thousands of texts (including nearly a dozen novels, beginning with Middlemarch) woven around her life. I read it with fascination."--Ellen Ross, Professor of History and Women's Studies, Ramapo College of New Jersey
"Israel has produced an unusual treatment of the life of Lady Emilia Dilke, an actor of importance and interest to scholars of Victorian high politics, art, social reform, and feminism. Much more than a 'life and times of...' work, this book demonstrates the integral, textual connections between the stories Dilke told about herself and others and the political, personal, private, cultural, and social life in Victorian Britain. Based upon a vast array of little-used primary materials, it offers an original and stimulating interpretation of both Emilia Dilke's life stories and the use of her life stories to achieve other ends. Israel is among a select group of scholars who seek to broaden and open the possibilities of biography. This is an impressive achievement."--Susan K. Kent, Professor of History, University of Colorado
"This is an impressive and intriguing post-modernist biographical disquisition providing much insight into the life and world of Francis Pattison/Emilia Dilke, art historian, trade unionist, fictionalist, and wife of two problematical Victorians, Mark Pattison and Sir Charles Dilke. The study is set within a rich palimpsest of nineteenth-century professional life and sexuality."--Peter Stansky, Stanford University
"Literary critics will find that Kali Israel's discussion of the exceptional Emilia Pattison provides new insights into the ways in which narratives inform the best type of cultural history. Israel's exemplary study reveals that material lives comprise both 'names' and 'stories', all involving conflicting kinds of personal, political, and social narration."--Joseph Bristow, University of California at Los Angeles
"Israel offers not only a theoretically rich analysis of her tasks but also a series of portraits and stories which accumulate without ever giving definitive shape to the Emilia Dilke that her culture and ours imagine her to be...a particularly innovative biography."--Studies in English Literature
"Names and Stories is scholarly, ambitious in scope, rich in allusion, and likely to appeal to readers from different fields, including social historians, art historians, and scholars interested in Victorian periodicals or the theory of life-writing."--Journal of Modern History
"Confronts conventional ways to tell stories, to report biography, or to make meaning of a life." World History
Notă biografică
Kali Israel was educated at Lewis and Clark College and Rutgers University. She is Associate Professor of History at the University of Michigan.