abstract: John Herdman provides a brief explanation for neglecting the Victorian sensational double in his work The Double in Nineteenth-Century Fiction, "Nor have I ventured into the vast hinterland of Victorian popular fiction in which doubles roam in abundance, as these are invariably derivative in origin and break no distinctive new territory of their own" (xi). To be sure the popular fiction of the Victorian Era would not produce such penetrating and resonate doubles found in the continental, and even American, literature of the same period until the works of Scottish writers James Hogg and later Robert Louis Stevenson; and while popular English writers have been rightly accused of "exploit[ing] it [the double] for sensational effects,...
Considering the many absurd coincidences, gender-bending characters, and unsubtle mockery of novelis...
Examines the mechanisms through which Collins updated the gothic novel to create the sensation novel...
This thesis explores Victorian sensation fiction and key authors who rely on essentialism, employing...
Victorian sensation fiction strives to go beyond its time through issues and characters that do not ...
Despite the Victorian society’s dismissal of sensation novels as low-brow literature and scholars’ l...
Victorian sensation novels often engage with investigation as a narrative subject and also a narrati...
Victorian society viewed physical appearance and internalized habit as direct manifestations of a pe...
By representing deviant gender and sexuality through the structural principle of doubling, Victorian...
In Victorian England, women were subjects within their patriarchal society. What Anne Brontë, Wilkie...
Sensation fiction allows Victorian women the space to develop apart from the desired angel in the ho...
Although some good work on Collins is now beginning to emerge, complex and central elements in his f...
Deborah Wynne has noted that from 1850 to 1860 there was a change in middle-class reading tastes. Sh...
Wilkie Collins’s The Woman in White (1860) and Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray (1890) are n...
Saverio Tomaiuolo’s In Lady Audley’s Shadow: Mary Elizabeth Braddon and Victorian Literary Genres is...
Why do we read what we read? Janice Radway examines works that were not popular in an author\u27s t...
Considering the many absurd coincidences, gender-bending characters, and unsubtle mockery of novelis...
Examines the mechanisms through which Collins updated the gothic novel to create the sensation novel...
This thesis explores Victorian sensation fiction and key authors who rely on essentialism, employing...
Victorian sensation fiction strives to go beyond its time through issues and characters that do not ...
Despite the Victorian society’s dismissal of sensation novels as low-brow literature and scholars’ l...
Victorian sensation novels often engage with investigation as a narrative subject and also a narrati...
Victorian society viewed physical appearance and internalized habit as direct manifestations of a pe...
By representing deviant gender and sexuality through the structural principle of doubling, Victorian...
In Victorian England, women were subjects within their patriarchal society. What Anne Brontë, Wilkie...
Sensation fiction allows Victorian women the space to develop apart from the desired angel in the ho...
Although some good work on Collins is now beginning to emerge, complex and central elements in his f...
Deborah Wynne has noted that from 1850 to 1860 there was a change in middle-class reading tastes. Sh...
Wilkie Collins’s The Woman in White (1860) and Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray (1890) are n...
Saverio Tomaiuolo’s In Lady Audley’s Shadow: Mary Elizabeth Braddon and Victorian Literary Genres is...
Why do we read what we read? Janice Radway examines works that were not popular in an author\u27s t...
Considering the many absurd coincidences, gender-bending characters, and unsubtle mockery of novelis...
Examines the mechanisms through which Collins updated the gothic novel to create the sensation novel...
This thesis explores Victorian sensation fiction and key authors who rely on essentialism, employing...