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Writing the reader : configurations of a cultural practice in the English novel / Dorothee Birke.
LIBRA PR821 .B57 2016
Available from offsite location
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Birke, Dorothee, author.
- Series:
- Linguae & litterae ; 59.
- Linguae & litterae ; 59
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- English fiction.
- Authors and readers in literature.
- Readers--Social life and customs.
- English fiction--History and criticism.
- Books and reading.
- Genre:
- History.
- Physical Description:
- vii, 256 pages ; 24 cm.
- Place of Publication:
- Berlin ; Boston : De Gruyter, [2016]
- Summary:
- The history of the novel is also a history of shifting views of the value of novel reading. This study investigates how novels themselves participate in this development by featuring reading as a multidimensional cultural practice. English novels about obsessive reading, written in times of medial transition, serve as test cases for a model that brings together analyses of form and content. Book jacket.
- Contents:
- Part I
- Chapter 1 Writing the Reader 3
- Four Approaches to Reading 8
- The Significance of the Quixotic Reader's Gender 15
- The Quixotic Plot 18
- Self-Reflexivity Revisited 25
- Chapter 2 The Reader in the Text: Dramatizing Literary Communication 30
- The Projection of Reading Stances 33
- Narratorial Commentary and the Performance of Authorship 41
- Part II
- Chapter 3 The Ambivalent Rise of the Novel Reader: Charlotte Lennox's The Female Quixote 55
- Novel, Romance, and Reading around 1750 57
- Sex, Violence, and Arabella: Debating the Physical Impact of Reading 62
- Models of Virtue? Lennox and Johnson 68
- Great Expectations? Reading as a Socially Embedded Practice 78
- Probing Problems of Authority and Instruction 83
- Chapter 4 The Institutionalization of Novel Reading: Jane Austen's Northanger Abbey 91
- The Uses of Parody: Restructuring the Quixotic Plot 94
- Catherine Morland and the Politics of the Didactic 101
- Reading and the Channelling of Emotions 109
- Consumerism and Communities of Taste 113
- Reconsidering the Defense of the Novel 118
- Chapter 5 Psychologizing Reading as Social Behaviour: Mary Elizabeth Braddon's The Doctor's Wife 126
- Reading as a Bad Habit: Idleness and Licentiousness 130
- Isabel Sleaford and Emma Bovary 135
- Young Isabel and Reading as Compensation 142
- Isabel and Roland: The Temptations of Companionship 149
- Intertextuality Reloaded 155
- Sigismund Smith: Sensation Fiction and the Pleasures of Reading 159
- Part III
- Chapter 6 Looking Forward, Looking Back: Novel Reading in the Twenty-First Century 169
- Chapter 7 Taking Stock of the Novel Reader's History: Ian McEwan's Atonement 175
- Briony as a Quixotic Reader/Writer and the Problem of Cognition 176
- Achieving Atonement? Briony's Ethics of Storytelling 181
- Narrative Situation(s) and the Ethics of Form 187
- Atonement as Homage and Challenge to the History of the Novel 191
- Cecilia and Robbie: The Sacralization of Reading 195
- Chapter 8 The Nostalgic Future of Novel Reading: Alan Bennett's The Uncommon Reader 201
- The Quixote in Reverse 202
- Common and Uncommon Readers 208
- From the London Review of Books to the Internet: Media! Environments and Reading as Cultural Affiliation 213
- Emphasizing Medial Difference: The Uncommon Reader and Stephen Frears's The Queen 220.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- ISBN:
- 3110307634
- 9783110307634
- OCLC:
- 945641244
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