This thesis examines how conceptions of the voice in literature that emerged over the Victorian period adapted to, and were not silenced by, the noises of a relentlessly modernising world. From Thomas Carlyle through to Friedrich Kittler, it has long been argued that literature’s capacity to channel voices dissipated with the advent of the mass-circulation of print matter, the emergence of new media technologies and expanded communication networks. These changes are said to alter the relationship we have with literature, repudiating its Romantic promise as an inspired medium and revealing writing to be little more than a selective means of communication. And yet, writers who were witness to these changes – including Matthew Arnold, G. H. Le...
While the visual aspects of modernist prose (think of topics such as ‘the gaze’) have always been a ...
In The Poetry of Experience, Robert Langbaum places the dramatic monologue from Shakespeare to T. S....
Whereas “civilization” has often been dismissed in nineteenth-century studies as a rallying cry for ...
This dissertation registers the attempts of modern novelists to make the printed word resound, to ma...
Responding to Ansgar F. Nünning’s oft-neglected call to locate the clues indicating unreliable narra...
This study uses an archive of generically innovative and indeterminate texts in order to theorize th...
When George Du Maurier’s infamous mesmerist Svengali performs on his elastic penny whistle, the inst...
This book explores the literary representation of late Victorian and early Edwardian London from an ...
“Victorian Talk: Human Media and Literary Writing in the Age of Mass Print” investigates a mid- to l...
2012-07-13Through innovative techniques such as stream-of-consciousness, modernist writers created a...
This thesis argues for an associative relationship between listening and sympathy in the aesthetic s...
_Sound Effects_ traces the history of the relationship between oral conditions and aural effect in E...
The novel is composed entirely of voices: the most prominent among them is typically that of the nar...
Sound Minds: Women’s Novels, Vibrational Experience, and the Listening Imagination in Nineteenth-Cen...
This paper applies a sound studies approach to a literary studies use case: Using a mixed-methods ap...
While the visual aspects of modernist prose (think of topics such as ‘the gaze’) have always been a ...
In The Poetry of Experience, Robert Langbaum places the dramatic monologue from Shakespeare to T. S....
Whereas “civilization” has often been dismissed in nineteenth-century studies as a rallying cry for ...
This dissertation registers the attempts of modern novelists to make the printed word resound, to ma...
Responding to Ansgar F. Nünning’s oft-neglected call to locate the clues indicating unreliable narra...
This study uses an archive of generically innovative and indeterminate texts in order to theorize th...
When George Du Maurier’s infamous mesmerist Svengali performs on his elastic penny whistle, the inst...
This book explores the literary representation of late Victorian and early Edwardian London from an ...
“Victorian Talk: Human Media and Literary Writing in the Age of Mass Print” investigates a mid- to l...
2012-07-13Through innovative techniques such as stream-of-consciousness, modernist writers created a...
This thesis argues for an associative relationship between listening and sympathy in the aesthetic s...
_Sound Effects_ traces the history of the relationship between oral conditions and aural effect in E...
The novel is composed entirely of voices: the most prominent among them is typically that of the nar...
Sound Minds: Women’s Novels, Vibrational Experience, and the Listening Imagination in Nineteenth-Cen...
This paper applies a sound studies approach to a literary studies use case: Using a mixed-methods ap...
While the visual aspects of modernist prose (think of topics such as ‘the gaze’) have always been a ...
In The Poetry of Experience, Robert Langbaum places the dramatic monologue from Shakespeare to T. S....
Whereas “civilization” has often been dismissed in nineteenth-century studies as a rallying cry for ...