This study deals with works of imperialist, decadent and futuristic fiction written roughly between 1885 and 190A. The main authors under discussion are Conrad, Kipling, Haggard, Pater, Wilde, Huysmans and other European decadents. Wells, Morris and Hudson, and its primary aim is to show the similarity of vision between late nineteenth century authors writing in different genres or fields. The thesis starts by taking the 'strange' worlds presented in the fiction of these writers and relating them to the aesthetic idea that fiction involves the construction of the world of the text, a world which is determined according to the principles of art and perception, a world which is not simply imitative of a supposedly actual world of facts. To su...
Of That Transfigured World identifies a generally unremarked upon mode of nineteenth-century litera...
Of That Transfigured World identifies a generally unremarked upon mode of nineteenth-century litera...
The dissertation argues that the preoccupation with art in the Victorian novel is, paradoxically, an...
This thesis offers a study of a particular period (1884-1899) in Britain in which Fantastic literatu...
This study focuses on three significant issues addressed by utopian literature of the late Victorian...
This Ph. D. thesis investigates the use of fantasy by British and Irish 'Decadent' authors and illus...
272 pagesThis dissertation examines the historical and cultural significance of the connections that...
This thesis explores the complex ways in which mental illness was portrayed in Victorian fiction. It...
This Ph.D. thesis investigates the use of fantasy by British and Irish 'Decadent' authors and illust...
As neo-Victorian fiction continues to evolve in the contemporary era, present day readers are invite...
This dissertation explores the rich intersections between realist fiction and pre-cinematic optical ...
“Problems of Life and Mind in Late Victorian Speculative Fiction” contributes to the thriving study ...
Late Victorian stories of horror and the supernatural, considered collectively, represent a signific...
Late Victorian stories of horror and the supernatural, considered collectively, represent a signific...
Some characters solicit onlookers’ attention to their face and physical appearance in Victorian fict...
Of That Transfigured World identifies a generally unremarked upon mode of nineteenth-century litera...
Of That Transfigured World identifies a generally unremarked upon mode of nineteenth-century litera...
The dissertation argues that the preoccupation with art in the Victorian novel is, paradoxically, an...
This thesis offers a study of a particular period (1884-1899) in Britain in which Fantastic literatu...
This study focuses on three significant issues addressed by utopian literature of the late Victorian...
This Ph. D. thesis investigates the use of fantasy by British and Irish 'Decadent' authors and illus...
272 pagesThis dissertation examines the historical and cultural significance of the connections that...
This thesis explores the complex ways in which mental illness was portrayed in Victorian fiction. It...
This Ph.D. thesis investigates the use of fantasy by British and Irish 'Decadent' authors and illust...
As neo-Victorian fiction continues to evolve in the contemporary era, present day readers are invite...
This dissertation explores the rich intersections between realist fiction and pre-cinematic optical ...
“Problems of Life and Mind in Late Victorian Speculative Fiction” contributes to the thriving study ...
Late Victorian stories of horror and the supernatural, considered collectively, represent a signific...
Late Victorian stories of horror and the supernatural, considered collectively, represent a signific...
Some characters solicit onlookers’ attention to their face and physical appearance in Victorian fict...
Of That Transfigured World identifies a generally unremarked upon mode of nineteenth-century litera...
Of That Transfigured World identifies a generally unremarked upon mode of nineteenth-century litera...
The dissertation argues that the preoccupation with art in the Victorian novel is, paradoxically, an...