And yet another new edition of a book related to Brontë studies.
Victorian Renovations of the Novel. Narrative Annexes and the Boundaries of Representation written by
Suzanne Keen and published by Cambridge University Press in the series
Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture, appears this December in a paperback edition (the hardback and first edition was published in 1998).
This study of narrative technique in Victorian novels introduces the concept of ‘narrative annexes’ whereby unexpected characters, impermissible subjects and plot-changing events are introduced within fictional worlds which otherwise exclude them. They are marked by the crossing of borders into previously unrepresented places and new genres or modes, challenging Victorian cultural and literary norms. Suzanne Keen’s original readings of novels by Charlotte Brontë, Dickens, Disraeli, Hardy, Kingsley, Trollope, and Wells show these writers negotiating the boundaries of representation to reveal in narrative annexes the subjects (notably sexuality and social class) which contemporary critics sought to exclude from the realm of the novel. Fears of disease, of working men, of Popery, of dark-skinned ‘others’, of the poor who toil and starve in close proximity to the rectories, homes, clubs and walled gardens of Victorian polite society draw readers down narrow alleys, through thorny hedges, across desolate heaths, into narrative annexes.
• Original combination of narrative theory (to which it contributes a new term) and historically based criticism of the Victorian novel
• New and original readings of novels by Charlotte Brontë, Dickens, Disraeli, Hardy, Kingsley, Trollope and H. G. Wells • Readings centre on narrative technique for introducing currently topical subjects: sexuality, class, race.
The book can be consulted on
http://print.google.comCategories: Charlotte_Brontë, Scholar, Victorian_Era, Books
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