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The Sky as Heteroto...
The Sky as Heterotopia in in Dickens, Gissing, and Woolf
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- Lindskog, Claes E. (author)
- Lund University,Lunds universitet,Engelska,Avdelningen för engelska,Sektion 4,Språk- och litteraturcentrum,Institutioner,Humanistiska och teologiska fakulteterna,English Studies,Division of English Studies,Section 4,Centre for Languages and Literature,Departments,Joint Faculties of Humanities and Theology
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Kane, Louise (editor)
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(creator_code:org_t)
- New York : Routledge, 2022
- 2022
- English 13 s.
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In: Re-Reading the Age of Innovation : Victorians, Moderns, and Literary Newness, 1830–1950 - Victorians, Moderns, and Literary Newness, 1830–1950. - New York : Routledge. - 9781003191629 - 9781032043593 ; , s. 23-35
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Abstract
Subject headings
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- Different aspects of the novel have changed at a different pace. If one compares modernist novels with those of a 100 years previously, not only is an inward turn noticeable but also an outward turn: the sky, for example, is much more present. This change does not, however, coincide with the Victorian-modernist divide but rather comes when the influence of romantic poetry reaches the novel. This chapter presents a statistical survey of mentionings of the sky in 240 representative British novels from the period 1719–1929. It also examines how Dickens’s Barnaby Rudge , Gissing’s Thyrza, and Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway in different ways use the sky to comment on the idea of the romantic. Together, these two parts demonstrate that in this respect, at least, the Victorian and the modernist novel have much more in common than either has with earlier novels.
Subject headings
- HUMANIORA -- Språk och litteratur -- Litteraturvetenskap (hsv//swe)
- HUMANITIES -- Languages and Literature -- General Literary Studies (hsv//eng)
Publication and Content Type
- kap (subject category)
- ref (subject category)
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