Annoying the VictoriansPsychology Press, 1995 - 271 páginas What happens when bad criticism happens to good people? Annoying the Victorians sets the tradition of critical discourse and literary criticism on its ear, as well as a few other areas. James Kincaid brings his witty, erudite and thoroughly cynical self to the Victorians, and they will never read (or be read) quite the same. In a series of essays covering the "hit parade" of the Victorians--Tennyson, Dickens, Meredith, Hardy and the erotic poetry of The Pearl --Kincaid creates a sharp, insicive parody of the methods of good criticism (and sometimes the practicioners,) all the while raising questions about what "good criticism" is, and how these rules serve to maintain the status quo. Annoying the Victorians mocks those conventions held dear, and examines the sacredness of "the text," the employment of evidence, the construction of sound arguments, and the solemn tone in which the discipline is practiced, showing them all for smoke and mirrors, exposing the Wizard behind the curtain of critical practice. Throughout, James Kincaid amuses, prods, provokes and enlightens the reader with a machete-like directness couched in satire. The essays will surely annoy both Victorians and Victorianists alike, as well as those worshipping at the church of Literary Criticism. |
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Contenido
Fattening Up on Pickwick | 21 |
Little NellShe Dead | 35 |
Viewing and Blurring with Dickens | 47 |
4 | 69 |
Performance Roles the Self and Our Own Charles Dickens | 75 |
Who Is Relieved by the Idea of Comic Relief? | 91 |
Tennysons Happy Losses | 99 |
Tennyson Hallams Corpse Miltons Murder | 113 |
H Rider Haggards The Return of She An Explication | 169 |
Anthony Trollope and the Unmannerly Novel | 207 |
The Power of Barchester Towers | 225 |
Notes | 255 |
269 | |
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Términos y frases comunes
allow Anthony Trollope canonical chapter characters child claim comedy comic connection corpse creature critics David death deconstruction desire Dickens Duke Duke's Duke's Children erotic essay Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick exhibitionism exhibitionistic eyes fact Fat Boy father feel flesh forget Frankenstein gender give Hallam happy Harold Bloom heart imagined interpretation Jude Jude's kind Lacan language Little Dorrit look Lycidas Martin Chuzzlewit means Memoriam memory Meredith metaphor Milton Modern Love Murdstone narrative narrator nature never novel of manners object Oxford Pearl poems Pecksniff perhaps Pickwick play pleasure plot poem poet poetic poetry political pornographic position Press question Quilp reader reading scene seems sense sexual silence Silverbridge simply sort spanking speak story sublime suggest talk tell Tennyson there's things tradition tragedy Trollope Trollope's turn Univ Victor Victorian voyeurism Walton women words