This dissertation analyzes detailed description in nineteenth-century realist novels, revealing that this distinctive mode often relies on techniques typically associated with British aestheticism: including symbolism, atmosphere, and luxuriant detail or “purple prose.” By reading canonically realist novels by George Eliot and Thomas Hardy alongside canonically aestheticist texts by John Ruskin, Arthur Symons, Vernon Lee, and others, I aim to break up the critical consensus around realist description as an essentially verisimilar device. I argue that, paradoxically, realist description teaches the reader to aestheticize reality in order to fully grasp its plenitude, connectedness, and meaning. While scholars often frame realism and aestheti...
This dissertation investigates literary representations of the scene of viewership in Victorian lite...
This dissertation considers the explicit relation of poetic form to the rise of the novel and to the...
Through a series of textual comparisons between Leigh Hunt’s essays and Charles Dickens’s early city...
This dissertation analyzes detailed description in nineteenth-century realist novels, revealing that...
The dissertation argues that the preoccupation with art in the Victorian novel is, paradoxically, an...
Two technologies in the nineteenth-century drastically altered how the English saw and conceptualize...
iv, 120 leaves ; 28 cm.This thesis investigates the way that moral and aesthetic concerns about the ...
This dissertation proposes that British novelistic realism of the nineteenth century is not an autho...
The narratives of the Victorian writers are infused with detailed expositions of living, felt pictur...
textThis dissertation tracks a series of literary interventions into scientific debates of the late ...
This thesis argues for an associative relationship between listening and sympathy in the aesthetic s...
Dr. Alison Byerly\u27s concern is with the use in their fiction by four Victorian novelists of art w...
This dissertation explores how the descriptive backgrounds of the Victorian novel helped to shape th...
This dissertation argues that cross-disciplinary discord between literary, philosophical, and scient...
This book confronts a significant paradox in the development of literary realism: the very novels th...
This dissertation investigates literary representations of the scene of viewership in Victorian lite...
This dissertation considers the explicit relation of poetic form to the rise of the novel and to the...
Through a series of textual comparisons between Leigh Hunt’s essays and Charles Dickens’s early city...
This dissertation analyzes detailed description in nineteenth-century realist novels, revealing that...
The dissertation argues that the preoccupation with art in the Victorian novel is, paradoxically, an...
Two technologies in the nineteenth-century drastically altered how the English saw and conceptualize...
iv, 120 leaves ; 28 cm.This thesis investigates the way that moral and aesthetic concerns about the ...
This dissertation proposes that British novelistic realism of the nineteenth century is not an autho...
The narratives of the Victorian writers are infused with detailed expositions of living, felt pictur...
textThis dissertation tracks a series of literary interventions into scientific debates of the late ...
This thesis argues for an associative relationship between listening and sympathy in the aesthetic s...
Dr. Alison Byerly\u27s concern is with the use in their fiction by four Victorian novelists of art w...
This dissertation explores how the descriptive backgrounds of the Victorian novel helped to shape th...
This dissertation argues that cross-disciplinary discord between literary, philosophical, and scient...
This book confronts a significant paradox in the development of literary realism: the very novels th...
This dissertation investigates literary representations of the scene of viewership in Victorian lite...
This dissertation considers the explicit relation of poetic form to the rise of the novel and to the...
Through a series of textual comparisons between Leigh Hunt’s essays and Charles Dickens’s early city...