Fb2 The Victorian Serial (Victorian Literature and Culture) ePub
by Linda K. Hughes
Category: | History and Criticism |
Subcategory: | Fiction |
Author: | Linda K. Hughes |
ISBN: | 0813913144 |
ISBN13: | 978-0813913148 |
Language: | English |
Publisher: | University of Virginia Press; 1St Edition edition (May 29, 1991) |
Pages: | 368 |
Fb2 eBook: | 1532 kb |
ePub eBook: | 1581 kb |
Digital formats: | mbr lit azw doc |
The Victorian Serial. Linda K. Hughes and Michael Lund.
The Victorian Serial. Victorian Connections.
The Victorian Serial book. 0813913144 (ISBN13: 9780813913148). Hughes and Michael Lund provide a new approach to the study. The Victorian Serial (Victorian Literature and Culture Series).
Victorian Literature and Culture seeks to publish innovative scholarship of broad interest to the field. We are especially interested in work that contributes or responds to the current moment of heightened methodological reflection, theoretical energy, and formal experimentation. We welcome submissions that aim to reimagine the field of Victorian studies in the twenty-first century, whether by interrogating the field’s scope, boundaries, methods, and shibboleths; leveraging new or neglected conceptual resources; exploring new archives; discovering or establishing new cross-field connections;.
Victorian literature is literature, mainly written in English, during the reign of Queen Victoria (1837–1901) (the Victorian era). It was preceded by Romanticism and followed by the Edwardian era (1901–1910)
Victorian literature is literature, mainly written in English, during the reign of Queen Victoria (1837–1901) (the Victorian era). It was preceded by Romanticism and followed by the Edwardian era (1901–1910). While in the preceding Romantic period, poetry had been the conquerors, novels were the emperors of the Victorian period. Charles Dickens (1812–1870) dominated the first part of Victoria's reign and most rightly can be called "The King of Victorian Literature".
Victorian Web (Elegant web-based hypertext on Victorian literature and culture, covering topics such as Social Context, Economics, Science . Hughes and Michael Lund, The Victorian Serial (1991).
Victorian Web (Elegant web-based hypertext on Victorian literature and culture, covering topics such as Social Context, Economics, Science, Technology, Politics, Literature, and the Visual Arts. Maintained by George P. Landow, Brown University. Literary Resources - Victorian British (Easy-to-use list of Victorian web sites. Winifred Hughes, The Maniac in the Cellar: Sensation Novels of the 1860s (1980).
Influence of Victorian era literature and poetry. The literature of the Victorian age (1837-1901) entered a new period after the romantic revival. Much of this writing was not regarded as literature but one book, in particular, Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species, remains famous. Famous novelists and their works. The literature of this era was preceded by romanticism and was followed by modernism or realism. Hence, it can also be called a fusion of romantic and realist style of writing. The theory of evolution contained within the work shook many of the ideas the Victorians had about themselves.
The Victorian Serial (Vi. .has been added to your Cart. Hughes is Associate Professor of English at Texas Christian University, Fort Worth. She is the author of The Manyfaced Glass: Tennyson's Dramatic Monologues. Michael Lund is Professor of English at Longwood College, Farmville, Virginia, and is the author of Reading Thackeray. Series: Victorian Literature and Culture.
Victorian Literature and Culture seeks to publish cutting-edge scholarship of broad.
Поиск книг BookFi BookSee - Download books for free. Victorian Writing about Risk: Imagining a Safe England in a Dangerous World (Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture). Категория: Образование. 941 Kb. Leisure and Recreation in a Victorian Mining Community: The Social Economy of Leisure in Rural North-East England, 1820-1914 (Sport in the Global Society).
Linda K. Hughes and Michael Lund provide a new approach to the study of installment literature by showing how it embodied a view of life intrinsic to Victorian culture. They examine how the serial format affected the ways Victorian audiences interpreted sixteen major works of poetry and fiction. Their findings show that Victorian interpretations were different from those of twentieth century single-volume readings.
Hughes and Lund conclude that in order to understand Victorian literature, we must understand serialization, since it was the vehicle for the best literature of the age. Further, they assert we must understand serialization as a literary form attuned to the fundamental spirit of the age.