Buch, Englisch, 208 Seiten, Format (B × H): 179 mm x 236 mm, Gewicht: 450 g
Buch, Englisch, 208 Seiten, Format (B × H): 179 mm x 236 mm, Gewicht: 450 g
ISBN: 978-0-231-13058-5
Verlag: Columbia University Press
In the decades following the revolutions in British North America and France, the major novelists distinguished themselves as authors by questioning the fantasy of a self-made individual. To show how novels by Defoe, Austen, Scott, Brontë, Dickens, Eliot, Hardy, Haggard, and Stoker participated in the process of making, updating, and perpetuating the figure of the individual, Armstrong puts them in dialogue with the writings of Locke, Hume, Rousseau, Malthus, Darwin, Kant, and Freud. Such theorists as Althusser, Balibar, Foucault, and Deleuze help her make the point that the individual was not one but several different figures. The delineation and potential of the modern subject depended as much upon what it had to incorporate as what alternatives it had to keep at bay to address the conflicts raging in and around the British novel.
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AcknowledgmentsIntroduction. How Novels Think1. How the Misfit Became a Moral Protagonist2. When Novels Made Nations3. Why a Good Man Is Hard to Find in Victorian Fiction4. The Polygenetic Imagination5. The Necessary GothicNotesIndex