The Magic Lantern: Representations of the Double in DickensRoutledge, 2020 M10 28 - 212 páginas The book provides an original investigation of the double trope as a central area of Dicken’s writings in their relation to Victorian culture, using this examination of the double to shed light on such issues as urban space and imperialism in the Victorian era. |
Contenido
1 | |
Chapter One Split Images | 21 |
Chapter Two Double Characters | 55 |
Chapter Three Dreamlands | 87 |
Chapter Four Double Meanings | 119 |
Notes | 155 |
Bibliography | 187 |
199 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Magic Lantern: Representations of the Double in Dickens Maria Cristina Paganoni Vista previa limitada - 2020 |
The Magic Lantern: Representation of the Double in Dickens Maria Cristina Paganoni Vista de fragmentos - 2008 |
The Magic Lantern: Representations of the Double in Dickens Maria Cristina Paganoni Sin vista previa disponible - 2015 |
Términos y frases comunes
appears Arthur Clennam attitude become behavior Bleak House body Charles Dickens Chuzzlewit comic construction critical David Copperfield desire dichotomy Dickens world Dickens's fiction Dickens's novels Dickens's writing Dickensian discourse Dombey Dombey and Son Doppelgänger doubling patterns dreams Edwin Drood emblematic emotional energy example experience face fact feeling flâneur gaze grotesque grotesque body Harmondsworth hegemonic historical human hypocrites Ibid icons identity ideological imagination individual insanity John Harmon language later novels linguistic literary Little Dorrit London magic lantern Martin Chuzzlewit means melancholy metaphor metonymy middle-class mirror modern Mutual Friend Mystery of Edwin narrative narrator nineteenth-century Oxford Penguin Pickwick Papers Pip's plot psychic psychological rational relationship René Girard repressed role semantic sexual shadow shows sion social society split structure subversive symbolic texts textuality thematic tion traits transgression trope unconscious University Press urban Uriah Heep Victorian culture voice woman words