This article explores the meaningfulness of ‘style’ as a critical concept in contemporary English literary studies. Despite appearing to have fallen out of fashion with the rise of theory in the 1970s, style remains closely linked to canons of historical thought. The article reflects upon how the vicissitudes of English literary style emerge from the historical conditions of upper class Englishness, particularly its ridiculing of Enlightenment abstraction. Through a close reading of Edward St Aubyn's Patrick Melrose novels (1992–2011), it is argued that style remains an ‘English’ inheritance, but that it has been infiltrated by the legacies of Nietzschean and psychoanalytic conceptions of modern subjectivity, and by the voices of literary m...
In this study, I assert that prior to the French Revolution, early eighteenth-century Gothic works s...
The article considers two main aspects of literary estrangement in neo-Victorian fiction, starting f...
This essay begins by claiming that much conventional usage of fictional literature as historical evi...
This article outlines a systematic theory of style that aims to combine “social formalism” with narr...
Style emerged into discursive prominence in nineteenth-century Europe at the same time as the classi...
I observe that the aim and method of a Victorian text within Shakespeare criticism overlaps signific...
This essay sets the parameters of this special issue on the contemporary problem of style. Noting th...
This essay sets the parameters of this special issue on the contemporary problem of style. Noting th...
This article looks at how the « English line” became one of the defining features of Englishness fro...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Scrutiny2: issues in E...
This article addresses the characteristic styles and modes of self-presentation used by such Victori...
The stylistic discontinuities that are a widely recognised feature of literature from the world-syst...
Through a series of textual comparisons between Leigh Hunt’s essays and Charles Dickens’s early city...
Style in Fiction was probably the most important book I read as an undergraduate student. I bought a...
I argue that The Elements of Style by Strunk and White comes out of a history connecting it to the n...
In this study, I assert that prior to the French Revolution, early eighteenth-century Gothic works s...
The article considers two main aspects of literary estrangement in neo-Victorian fiction, starting f...
This essay begins by claiming that much conventional usage of fictional literature as historical evi...
This article outlines a systematic theory of style that aims to combine “social formalism” with narr...
Style emerged into discursive prominence in nineteenth-century Europe at the same time as the classi...
I observe that the aim and method of a Victorian text within Shakespeare criticism overlaps signific...
This essay sets the parameters of this special issue on the contemporary problem of style. Noting th...
This essay sets the parameters of this special issue on the contemporary problem of style. Noting th...
This article looks at how the « English line” became one of the defining features of Englishness fro...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Scrutiny2: issues in E...
This article addresses the characteristic styles and modes of self-presentation used by such Victori...
The stylistic discontinuities that are a widely recognised feature of literature from the world-syst...
Through a series of textual comparisons between Leigh Hunt’s essays and Charles Dickens’s early city...
Style in Fiction was probably the most important book I read as an undergraduate student. I bought a...
I argue that The Elements of Style by Strunk and White comes out of a history connecting it to the n...
In this study, I assert that prior to the French Revolution, early eighteenth-century Gothic works s...
The article considers two main aspects of literary estrangement in neo-Victorian fiction, starting f...
This essay begins by claiming that much conventional usage of fictional literature as historical evi...