"Ideas in Things explores apparently inconsequential objects in popular Victorian texts to make contact with their fugitive meanings. Developing an innovative approach to analyzing nineteenth-century fiction, Elaine Freedgood here reconnects the things readers unwittingly ingore to the stories they tell.""Building her case around objects from three well-known Victorian novels - the mahogany furniture in Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre, the calico curtains in Elizabeth Gaskell's Mary Barton, and "Negro head" tobacco in Charles Dickens's Great Expectations - Freedgood argues that these things are connected to histories that the novels barely acknowledge, generating darker meanings outside the novels' symbolic systems. A valuable contribution to ...
This dissertation explores the many second-order economies of nineteenth-century Britain—salvage, re...
In the face of financial disaster, Dr Lydgate attempts to share his concerns with his wife, Rosamun...
In “Clothes: From the Novelist’s Point of View” (1886), Deliverance Dingle states that contemporary ...
This dissertation explores how Victorian concepts of subject formation resulted in the concomitant c...
This dissertation explores how Victorian concepts of subject formation resulted in the concomitant c...
Elaine Freedgood, The Ideas in Things: Fugitive Meaning in the Victorian Novel. Chicago and London: ...
In the nineteenth century, the relationship between the human body and the object world was redefine...
How should we deal with the ‘stuff' in books? This is the question addressed in the lead articles of...
How should we deal with the ‘stuff' in books? This is the question addressed in the lead articles of...
In Bleak House , Dickens satirizes contemporary conditions in London in order to diagnose what he se...
In Bleak House , Dickens satirizes contemporary conditions in London in order to diagnose what he se...
203 pagesThis dissertation brings together strands of literary formalism and historical work on coll...
This thesis explores how the Victorian concept of success – fundamental to Victorians’ understanding...
The book was originally published by Ashgate. It is now republished by Routledge.How key changes to ...
This review essay takes Bill Brown's question, how we ask things 'to make meaning, to remake ourselv...
This dissertation explores the many second-order economies of nineteenth-century Britain—salvage, re...
In the face of financial disaster, Dr Lydgate attempts to share his concerns with his wife, Rosamun...
In “Clothes: From the Novelist’s Point of View” (1886), Deliverance Dingle states that contemporary ...
This dissertation explores how Victorian concepts of subject formation resulted in the concomitant c...
This dissertation explores how Victorian concepts of subject formation resulted in the concomitant c...
Elaine Freedgood, The Ideas in Things: Fugitive Meaning in the Victorian Novel. Chicago and London: ...
In the nineteenth century, the relationship between the human body and the object world was redefine...
How should we deal with the ‘stuff' in books? This is the question addressed in the lead articles of...
How should we deal with the ‘stuff' in books? This is the question addressed in the lead articles of...
In Bleak House , Dickens satirizes contemporary conditions in London in order to diagnose what he se...
In Bleak House , Dickens satirizes contemporary conditions in London in order to diagnose what he se...
203 pagesThis dissertation brings together strands of literary formalism and historical work on coll...
This thesis explores how the Victorian concept of success – fundamental to Victorians’ understanding...
The book was originally published by Ashgate. It is now republished by Routledge.How key changes to ...
This review essay takes Bill Brown's question, how we ask things 'to make meaning, to remake ourselv...
This dissertation explores the many second-order economies of nineteenth-century Britain—salvage, re...
In the face of financial disaster, Dr Lydgate attempts to share his concerns with his wife, Rosamun...
In “Clothes: From the Novelist’s Point of View” (1886), Deliverance Dingle states that contemporary ...