This essay argues that Anthony Trollope‟s celebrated financial satire The Way We Live Now (1875) is not best regarded in the terms the novelist told us to regard it: that is, as an assault on „the commercial profligacy of the age‟. If this is true, then it is so only in the most general sense. But Trollope‟s own experiences with money in the years before the novel, discussed in this essay, suggest that he was intriguingly un-self-conscious about his own relationship with money and always declined to perceive in his own financial practices any reason to reflect on the morals of legitimate business. Examining the documentary evidence of Trollope‟s attitudes to finance in his own life, the essay concludes that The Way We Live Now continues the...
This dissertation examines the fiction and non-fiction that Anthony Trollope wrote in between his re...
This essay attempts to trace the course of Anthony Trollope's literary reputation; to suggest some e...
This study reads the rise, reign, and fall of the English gentleman through the lens of the hobblede...
Trollope wrote his Autobiography at a time when the value of his literary stock was at a low point. ...
This paper examines the range of very different conceptions of money and its legal and social signif...
The six Barsetshire novels are not only Anthony Trollope's most popular ones, but also those which ...
The latter half of the 19th century saw a rise in novels focusing directly on the stock-exchange and...
This article applies a historical formalist method to analyze two literary responses to the late nin...
The Barsetshire novels, written at a time of great social change, bring into juxtaposition men and w...
The Thesis opens with a brief summary of the ups and downs of Trollope's literary reputation. In the...
The Victorian novelist Anthony Trollope is best known for his cosy tales of clerical life. But the B...
Published by Leuven University Press © Universitaire Pers Leuven/Leuven University PressAn edited co...
Although much has been written about Anthony Trollope, most, if not all, has concentrated on his nov...
This essay takes as its point of departure Anthony Trollope’s tendency to reuse a version of the rom...
Anthony Trollope (1815-1882) resides in the pantheon of nineteenth century English literature. Overc...
This dissertation examines the fiction and non-fiction that Anthony Trollope wrote in between his re...
This essay attempts to trace the course of Anthony Trollope's literary reputation; to suggest some e...
This study reads the rise, reign, and fall of the English gentleman through the lens of the hobblede...
Trollope wrote his Autobiography at a time when the value of his literary stock was at a low point. ...
This paper examines the range of very different conceptions of money and its legal and social signif...
The six Barsetshire novels are not only Anthony Trollope's most popular ones, but also those which ...
The latter half of the 19th century saw a rise in novels focusing directly on the stock-exchange and...
This article applies a historical formalist method to analyze two literary responses to the late nin...
The Barsetshire novels, written at a time of great social change, bring into juxtaposition men and w...
The Thesis opens with a brief summary of the ups and downs of Trollope's literary reputation. In the...
The Victorian novelist Anthony Trollope is best known for his cosy tales of clerical life. But the B...
Published by Leuven University Press © Universitaire Pers Leuven/Leuven University PressAn edited co...
Although much has been written about Anthony Trollope, most, if not all, has concentrated on his nov...
This essay takes as its point of departure Anthony Trollope’s tendency to reuse a version of the rom...
Anthony Trollope (1815-1882) resides in the pantheon of nineteenth century English literature. Overc...
This dissertation examines the fiction and non-fiction that Anthony Trollope wrote in between his re...
This essay attempts to trace the course of Anthony Trollope's literary reputation; to suggest some e...
This study reads the rise, reign, and fall of the English gentleman through the lens of the hobblede...