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Abstracts
for Volume 63
Abstracts
> Vol 63, Issue 1
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| Dennis
Kezar |
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Law/Form/History:
Shakespeare's Verdict in All Is True |
This essay considers a long-running institutional antagonism
between law and theater as a concern (on the side of the law)
about formal contagion -- a fear that drama's modes of representation
and interpretation can somehow infect the legal process of
finding fact and constituting truth. Shakespeare's All
is True (or Henry VIII) presents this antagonism
not only as a contest between theatrical and legal modes,
but also as a contest between two conceptions of history (form
and content). The play is finally committed to collapsing
these binaries -- to delivering verdicts (speaking truths)
that take their authority from the law and historical particularity,
as well as from the protocols of drama.
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| Colin
Jager |
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Mansfield
Park and the End of Natural Theology |
This essay argues that Mansfield Park critically examines
the argument from design, the most widespread and important
theological tenet among England's educated classes. The heroine
Fanny Price reaches toward an imaginative reinterpretation
of eighteenth-century latitudinarian ecclesiastical history,
but this possible history can appear only as a fantasy world.
Meanwhile, the naturalized status of latitudinarian orthodoxy
to which the hero Edmund Bertram is heir begins to look less
natural as various allegories for the narrative-improvement,
acting, and slavery-are introduced. This instability becomes
clear, finally, in several conversations about nature itself,
in which it turns out that some people, Mary Crawford especially,
are simply resistant to the argument from design's persuasive
powers. Mary's negative presence achieves formal recognition
when the narrative shatters its own easy-going procedures
in order to expel her and bring Edmund and Fanny together.
In thus ambivalently turning away from design as a narrative
device, Austen highlights its developing inability to reliably
narrate a life.
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| Andrew
H. Miller |
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Perfectly
Helpless |
This essay studies the aesthetic experience of readerly helplessness
before the suffering of characters in novels, and in the novels
of Jane Austen in particular. The first half of the essay
attempts both to evoke this experience of helplessness; the
second half attempts to situate it historically and conceptually
within nineteenth century perfectionism.
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| Kang Liu |
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The Short-lived
Avant-Garde Literary Movement and Its Transformation: The Case
of Yu Hua |
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Abstracts
> Vol 63, Issue 2
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Title |
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| Margaret
Russett and Joseph A. Dane |
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"Everlastinge
to Posterytie": Chatterton's Spirited Youth |
Thomas Chatterton,
often regarded as a figure on the fringes of eighteenth-century
culture, is best understood as the originator of that cardinal
Romantic maxim: "the child is father of the man."
Chatterton, in other words, is Romanticism's figure for temporal
recursion, and for a challenge to literary genealogy that is
sometimes misread as Freudian "family-romance." Examining
Chatterton's own poetry and prose, as well as key texts in his
eighteenth-century, Romantic, and later editorial reception,
Margaret Russett and Joseph A. Dane argue that Chatterton powerfully
disrupts linear accounts of poetic development and of the relationship
between original and imitation. This disruption is a function
of the genealogical fantasy that proved attractive to both Chatterton
and his detractors: that of a purely masculine lineage that
validates the modern poet as chosen son. Having traced this
fantasy through to Chatterton's late nineteenth-century editor,
W. W. Skeat, the authors conclude with a brief meditation on
how it has been reified as the Anxiety of Influence.
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| Heather
McHugh |
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Presence
and Passage: A Poet's Wordsworth |
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| Nancy
Yousef |
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The Monster
in a Dark Room: Frankenstein, Feminism, and Philosophy |
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| Gail McDonald |
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The Mind
a Department Store: Reconfiguring Space in the Gilded Age |
The essay examines the metaphor of blurred or absent architectural
boundarieswhat Georg Simmel termed the "modern
feeling against closed spaces"in three discursive
arenas: the physical space of domestic interiors and department
stores, the mental space of William James's psychological
writings, and the fictive space of utopian and naturalist
novels. Edith Wharton's and Ogden Codman, Jr.'s The Decoration
of Houses and Henry James's The American Scene
express alarm at the paucity of closable doors in American
architecture, seeing in this form of decor a disregard for
decorum. In contrast, Edward Bellamy's Looking Backward
and Bradford Peck's The World a Department Store celebrate
the open-plan emporium as a blueprint for the successful cooperative
society. The open-plan appears again in William James's descriptions
of mentation: mobility, circulation, interdependence, replaceability,
malleability and drift displace the more static models of
faculty and associative psychology. James's substitution of
fluid constructs for static ones has significant consequences
for conceptions of selfhood. The malleable self, its permeability
and relationality, provides both a topic and a set of narrative
problems for writers like Stephen Crane, Theodore Dreiser,
and Frank Norris.
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Abstracts
> Vol 63, Issue 3
Abstracts
> Vol 63, Issue 4
| Articles |
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| Author |
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Title |
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| Nicholas
Mason |
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Building
Brand Byron: Early Nineteenth-Century Advertising and the Marketing
of Childe Harold's Pilgrimage
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| Ted Underwood |
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Historical
Difference as Immortality in the Mid-Nineteenth-Century Novel |
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| Tamara
S. Wagner |
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"Overpowering
Vitality": Nostalgia and Men of Sensibility in the Fiction
of Wilkie Collins |
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This
essay traces the development of the new men of sensibility in
Wilkie Collins' fiction, arguing that while his early novels subscribe
to mid-Victorian ideals of manliness, his later fiction eschews
muscular masculinity, anticipating the rise of a new fin-de-siècle
anti-hero, but also harking back to the sentimental heroes of
the eighteenth-century novel of sentiment or sensibility. This
shift is connected to a sentimental reaffirmation of nostalgia,
lovesickness, and love at first sight as well as to a corresponding
redefinition of the villains, whose vitality contrasts with a
series of very similar feminized hypersensitive heroes. The pining
of lovesick and nostalgic men of sensibility is being reclaimed
from allegations of effeminacy as well as from Victorian pathologies
and instead praised as a virtue. To map this development, the
essay takes a close look at the mental, moral, and bodily strengths
and weaknesses of Wilkie Collins' (anti-)heroes and also at their
relationship with formidable and robust women - a relationship
that sheds an intriguing light on gender issues in Victorian fiction.
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| Barbara
Mann |
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Picturing
the Poetry of Anna Margolin |
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This essay examines the work of Anna Margolin (1887-1952), an
exemplary case of Yiddish poetry's straddling of the tension
between the tenets of world modernism, on the one hand, and
the demands of Jewish culture's normative claims to morality,
on the other. Margolin's work deploys notions of poetry's ability
to mimic artistic and visual media, a discourse typifying Imagist
trends in modernism; however, the medium of the Yiddish language
presents a challenge to this visualising practice, given its
unavoidable, orthographic connection to Hebrew, and thus to
traditional Jewish prohibitions on visual representation. The
resulting tension finds expression within Margolin's work through
a variety of stylistic devices, and through an engagement with
modernist poetry in other languages, including Pound, Rilke
and Mandelstam. Margolin's observation and synthesis of modernism
from the relative margins of Yiddish creativity, provides a
lens for re-evaluating the relation of canonicity, multilingualism
and gender.
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