Commodity Culture in Dickens s Household Words

Commodity Culture in Dickens s Household Words
Author: Catherine Waters
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 306
Release: 2016-12-05
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781351950411

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In 1850, Charles Dickens founded Household Words, a weekly miscellany intended to instruct and entertain an ever-widening middle-class readership. Published in the decade following the Great Exhibition of 1851, the journal appeared at a key moment in the emergence of commodity culture in Victorian England. Alongside the more well-known fiction that appeared in its pages, Dickens filled Household Words with articles about various commodities-articles that raise wider questions about how far society should go in permitting people to buy and sell goods and services: in other words, how far the laissez-faire market should extend. At the same time, Household Words was itself a commodity. With marketability clearly in view, Dickens required articles for his journal to be 'imaginative,' employing a style that critics ever since have too readily dismissed as mere mannerism. Locating the journal and its distinctive handling of non-fictional prose in relation to other contemporary periodicals and forms of print culture, this book demonstrates the role that Household Words in particular, and the Victorian press more generally, played in responding to the developing world of commodities and their consumption at midcentury.

A Library of Essays on Charles Dickens 6 Volume Set

A Library of Essays on Charles Dickens  6 Volume Set
Author: Catherine Waters
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2012
Genre: Cities and towns in literature
ISBN: 1409436276

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Dickens looked at the city from several aspects and his relationship to cities was part of his modernity and fascination. This anthology of criticism shows how Dickens thought about, grasped, and conceptualized the rapidly expanding and anonymous urban scene.

Charles Dickens and the Mid Victorian Press 1850 1870

Charles Dickens and the Mid Victorian Press  1850 1870
Author: Hazel Mackenzie,Ben Winyard
Publsiher: Legend Press Ltd
Total Pages: 480
Release: 2013
Genre: English literature
ISBN: 9781908684202

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Critical analysis of the magazines established and edited by Charles Dickens.

The Oxford Handbook of Charles Dickens

The Oxford Handbook of Charles Dickens
Author: Robert L. Patten,John O. Jordan,Catherine Waters
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 848
Release: 2018-09-13
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 9780191061110

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The Oxford Handbook of Charles Dickens is a comprehensive and up-to-date collection on Dickens's life and works. It includes original chapters on all of Dickens's writing and new considerations of his contexts, from the social, political, and economic to the scientific, commercial, and religious. The contributions speak in new ways about his depictions of families, environmental degradation, and improvements of the industrial age, as well as the law, charity, and communications. His treatment of gender, his mastery of prose in all its varieties and genres, and his range of affects and dramatization all come under stimulating reconsideration. His understanding of British history, of empire and colonization, of his own nation and foreign ones, and of selfhood and otherness, like all the other topics, is explained in terms easy to comprehend and profoundly relevant to global modernity.

The History of Reading Volume 3

The History of Reading  Volume 3
Author: R. Crone,S. Towheed
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 229
Release: 2011-08-26
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780230316737

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We inhabit a textually super-saturated and increasingly literate world. This volume encourages readers to consider the diverse methodologies used by historians of reading globally, and indicates how future research might take up the challenge of recording and interpreting the practices of readers in an increasingly digitized society.

The Business of the Novel

The Business of the Novel
Author: Simon R Frost
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2015-10-06
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781317322306

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This study shows how aesthetics and economics have been combined in a great work of literature. Frost examines the history of Middlemarch’s composition and publication within the context of Victorian demand, then goes on to consider the interpretation, reception and consumption of the book.

Imagining Italy

Imagining Italy
Author: Michael Hollington,John Jordan,Catherine Watts
Publsiher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 280
Release: 2010-08-11
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781443824613

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This book is a companion volume to Dickens and Italy, edited by Michael Hollington and Francesca Orestano, which aimed to fill an important gap in our understanding of England’s paramount novelist by studying his personal, political and literary relation to the foreign country he loved best of all of those he visited. Its focus is wider and its scope more ambitious and speculative. Without in any way leaving Dickens or his writings about Italy behind, the attempt here is to approach the Victorian fascination with that country from a broader, more theoretical perspective in which several current debates about travel writing are taken up and critically redeployed. The book is articulated in three parts. Part One concerns what the writings of Dickens and other Victorians can tell us about the history and theory of travel and travel writing, and Part Two, what they can tell us about particular Victorian writers themselves and their work. In Part Three the focus shifts in order to compare writing and visual representations of the experience of ‘abroad’ in general and Italy in particular, in an era when what can be thought of as modern visual culture is gradually taking shape. The book aims to show that the study of how Victorians imagined Italy can lead to a deeper understanding of some of the stereotypes that continue to inform contemporary tourism.

Reading Wanting and Broken Economics

Reading  Wanting  and Broken Economics
Author: Simon R. Frost
Publsiher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 445
Release: 2021-05-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781438483535

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Combining historical study, theorization, and experimental fiction, this book takes commodity culture and book retail around 1900 as the prime example of a market of symbolic goods. With the port of Southampton, England, as his case study, Simon R. Frost reveals how the city's bookshops, with their combinations of libraries, haberdashery, stationery, and books, sustained and were sustained by the dreams of ordinary readers, and how together they created the values powering this market. The goods in this market were symbolic and were not "consumed" but read. Their readings were created between other readers and texts, in happy disobedience to the neoliberal laws of the free market. Today such reader-created social markets comprise much of the world's branded economies, which is why Frost calls for a new understanding of both literary and market values.