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The Politics of Disinterestedness in Nineteenth-Century Literature
0 - Default Title
Description
Through a New Formalist approach, Natalie Roxburgh provides fresh readings of texts by Robert Browning, George Eliot, and Oscar Wilde, whose respective oeuvres demonstrate an attention to the formal affordances of literary disinterestedness that compete with-and critically assess-other versions. Browning develops a dramatic monologue so that the reader is enticed to re-read his poems; Eliot cultivates the problematic character who must struggle with her desire within a larger play of interests in a way that evolves the realist Condition of England novel; and Wilde experiments with the blending of genres in his critical essays by rendering them as dramatic dialogues that serve as contemplative mechanisms for playing with a multiplicity of interests, which he explores in terms of influence.
Reading these canonical authors through the politics of disinterestedness sheds new light on literary value and, in particular, the formal techniques seen as important by the end of the 19th century, just as liberal democracy emerged in Britain.
Product details
- Edition:
- 1
- Number of Pages:
- 192
- Release Date:
- 2025-05-01
- Publication Date:
- 2025-05-01
- Publisher:
- Bloomsbury Academic
- Languages:
- Original: English
- ISBN13:
- 9798765134986
- Weight:
- 437 g
- Height:
- 15.7 cm
- Width:
- 23.5 cm
- Thickness:
- 1.5 cm
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