Deciphering the perceived simplicity of the romance and idealisms of Isabel Clarendon as intentional and self-conscious intimates an entirely different view of the upper-class setting. Decoded, it appears as the site of precarious preset narratives that are precisely disposed to misreading and self-deception. Situating this early novel within the wider context of Gissing's works provides a better account of country house aesthetics than one based on the clear-cut dichotomy between "illusion and reality" that a chronological and biographical reading provokes. The focus of this argument is not to deny the presence of these concepts but rather to challenge the notion of their binary opposition through a rereading of the country house settin
George Gissing’s fifth published novel Thyrza (1887) has a wide geographical scope, stretching from ...
The washing bills that the heroine discovers in a cabinet in Jane Austen\u27s early novel Northanger...
grantor: University of TorontoThe novel marks the end of a concept of literary activity--i...
George Gissing’s novels sit on the permeable boundary between the diegetic tendencies of 19th-centur...
Exploring a hitherto neglected field, Writing Place: Mimesis, Subjectivity and Imagination in the Wo...
The following text is taken from the publisher's website: "Simon J James examines how Gissing's wor...
The purpose of this thesis is to study the effect of self-identification upon the characterization o...
George Gissing was obsessed with the question of ‘home’, in his own restless mobility as well as tha...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 191-193)It is virtually impossible to survey George Gissi...
The sense of exclusion is ubiquitous in George Gissing’s fiction ; whether it be heavily foregrounde...
This chapter examines George Gissing's last novel 'The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft', arguing th...
Drawing on Hans Robert Jauss' theory of the horizon of expectations, I examine a character type that...
For all his bitter experiences with women and his praise of Dickens\u27s vivid representation of sil...
This project investigates how novels from Howards End (1910) to The Stranger\u27s Child (2011), in r...
This thesis seeks to examine the representations of reading in the Romantic novel. William Godwin‰Ûª...
George Gissing’s fifth published novel Thyrza (1887) has a wide geographical scope, stretching from ...
The washing bills that the heroine discovers in a cabinet in Jane Austen\u27s early novel Northanger...
grantor: University of TorontoThe novel marks the end of a concept of literary activity--i...
George Gissing’s novels sit on the permeable boundary between the diegetic tendencies of 19th-centur...
Exploring a hitherto neglected field, Writing Place: Mimesis, Subjectivity and Imagination in the Wo...
The following text is taken from the publisher's website: "Simon J James examines how Gissing's wor...
The purpose of this thesis is to study the effect of self-identification upon the characterization o...
George Gissing was obsessed with the question of ‘home’, in his own restless mobility as well as tha...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 191-193)It is virtually impossible to survey George Gissi...
The sense of exclusion is ubiquitous in George Gissing’s fiction ; whether it be heavily foregrounde...
This chapter examines George Gissing's last novel 'The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft', arguing th...
Drawing on Hans Robert Jauss' theory of the horizon of expectations, I examine a character type that...
For all his bitter experiences with women and his praise of Dickens\u27s vivid representation of sil...
This project investigates how novels from Howards End (1910) to The Stranger\u27s Child (2011), in r...
This thesis seeks to examine the representations of reading in the Romantic novel. William Godwin‰Ûª...
George Gissing’s fifth published novel Thyrza (1887) has a wide geographical scope, stretching from ...
The washing bills that the heroine discovers in a cabinet in Jane Austen\u27s early novel Northanger...
grantor: University of TorontoThe novel marks the end of a concept of literary activity--i...