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Modes of Production of Victorian Novels
 
 
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Modes of Production of Victorian Novels [Paperback]

N. N. Feltes (Author)

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Book Description

0226241181 978-0226241180 May 15, 1989
In this sophisticated application of modern Marxist thought, N. N. Feltes demonstrates the determining influence of nineteenth-century publishing practices on the Victorian novel. His dialectical analysis leads to a comprehensive explanation of the development of capitalist novel production into the twentieth century.

Feltes focuses on five English novels: Dickens's Pickwick Papers, Thackeray's Henry Esmond, Eliot's Middlemarch, Hardy's Tess of the d'Urbervilles, and Forster's Howards End. Published at approximately twenty year intervals between 1836 and 1920, they each represent a different first-publication format: part-issue, three-volume, bimonthly, magazine-serial, and single-volume. Drawing on publishing, economic, and literary history, Feltes offers a broad, synthetic explanation of the relationship between the production and format of each novel, and the way in which these determine, in the last instance, the ideology of the text.

Modes of Production in Victorian Novels provides a Marxist structuralist analysis of historical events and practices described elsewhere only empirically, and traces their relationship to literary texts which have been analyzed only idealistically, thus setting these familiar works firmly and perhaps permanently into a framework of historic materialism.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
"More than Childe Harold or Waverley, more than Adam Bede or The Heir of Redclyffe. . . , Pickwick was the most sensational triumph in nineteenth-century publishing." Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
capitalist literary mode, mass bourgeois audience, novel production, new journalism, professional project, folk concept
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
George Eliot, Henry Esmond, Pickwick Papers, Howards End, Net Book Agreement, John Blackwood, Frederick Macmillan, John Murray, Marian Evans, George Smith, Miss Brooke, Vanity Fair, Society of Authors, Adam Bede, College of Physicians, Edward Arnold, Leonard Bast, Lord Campbell, Matthew Arnold, Tess of the D'Urbervilles, Victorian England, Father Holt, Sam Weller, Terry Eagleton, The Mill
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