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The Commodification of Identity in Victorian Narrative: Autobiography, Sensation, and the Literary Marketplace: Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture, cartea 121

Autor Sean Grass
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 29 sep 2021
In the first half of the nineteenth century autobiography became, for the first time, an explicitly commercial genre. Drawing together quantitative data on the Victorian book market, insights from the business ledgers of Victorian publishers and close readings of mid-century novels, Sean Grass demonstrates the close links between these genres and broader Victorian textual and material cultures. This book offers fresh perspectives on major works by Charles Dickens, George Eliot, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Wilkie Collins and Charles Reade, while also featuring archival research that reveals the volume, diversity, and marketability of Victorian autobiographical texts for the first time. Grass presents life-writing not as a stand-alone genre, but as an integral part of a broader movement of literary, cultural, legal and economic practices through which the Victorians transformed identity into a textual object of capitalist exchange.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781108706209
ISBN-10: 1108706207
Pagini: 298
Dimensiuni: 152 x 228 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.4 kg
Editura: Cambridge University Press
Colecția Cambridge University Press
Seria Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture

Locul publicării:Cambridge, United Kingdom

Cuprins

Introduction: life upon the exchange: commodifying the Victorian subject; 1. 'A vile symptom': autobiography and the commodification of identity; 2. 'Portable property': commodity and identity in Great Expectations; 3. Lady Audley's portrait: textuality, gender, and power; 4. Amnesia, madness, and financial fraud: ontologies of loss in Silas Marner and Hard Cash; 5. 'What money can make of life': willing subjects and commodity culture in Our Mutual Friend; 6. The Moonstone, sacred identity, and the material self; Conclusion: money made of life: the Tichborne claimant.

Recenzii

'This thoroughly researched and carefully documented work will be of interest to students of Victorian literature, history, publishing, and economics.' J. D. Vann, Choice
'The Commodification of Identity offers us new ways of conceiving the relationship between the dissolution of identity and the explosion of commercial life-writing in the Victorian era … It is part of a distinguished series of monographs on Victorian literature, the Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture.' Robert L. Patten, Dickens Quarterly
'Grass's readings of mid-to-late-century fiction are precise, multi-dimensional and persuasive, and the unusual collocation of texts works well.' Trev Broughton, Journal of Victorian Culture
'… offering both a concrete representation of the 'literary market' and an expansive sense of what might be included in the category of the economic, Grass's account is full of fascinating detail and revelatory analyses. In tracing how identity came to be conceived as textual, transactional, and exchangeable … Grass offers new frameworks for understanding Victorian life writing, fiction, and the period's innovative economic and bureaucratic cultures …The Commodification of Identity in Victorian Narrative … challenge[s] us to keep imagining terms that capture the flexibility of Victorian economic life and its narrative situations.' Aeron Hunt, Nineteenth-Century Literature

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Descriere

An exploration of the commodification of autobiography 1820–1860 in relation to shifting fictional representations of identity.