Search Books
Women's Work: Nationalism a… Porch Talk with Ernest Gain…

Supposing Bleak House (Victorian Literature and Culture Series)

Author Jordan, John O.
Publisher University of Virginia Press
Category Literary Criticism
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
32.46 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸

✓ Usually ships within 6 to 10 days.

Share:
Book Details
ISBN / ASIN0813934443
ISBN-139780813934440
AvailabilityUsually ships within 6 to 10 days.
Sales Rank3,040,779
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

Supposing "Bleak House" is an extended meditation on what many consider to be Dickens’s and nineteenth-century England’s greatest work of narrative fiction. Focusing on the novel’s retrospective narrator, whom he identifies as Esther Woodcourt in order to distinguish her from her younger, unmarried self, John Jordan offers provocative new readings of the novel’s narrative structure, its illustrations, its multiple and indeterminate endings, the role of its famous detective, Inspector Bucket, its many ghosts, and its relation to key events in Dickens’s life during the years 1850 to 1853.

Jordan draws on insights from narratology and psychoanalysis in order to explore multiple dimensions of Esther’s complex subjectivity and fractured narrative voice. His conclusion considers Bleak House as a national allegory, situating it in the context of the troubled decade of the 1840s and in relation to Dickens’s seldom-studied A Child’s History of England (written during the same years as his great novel) and to Jacques Derrida’s Specters of Marx.Supposing "Bleak House" claims Dickens as a powerful investigator of the unconscious mind and as a "popular" novelist deeply committed to social justice and a politics of inclusiveness.

Victorian Literature and Culture Series

Egyptian Literature
View
Utopia Paraiso E Historia: Inscripciones Del Mito En G…
View
Nation, State, and Empire in English Renaissance Lite…
View
On the Outskirts of Form: Practicing Cultural Poetics
View
Genre at the Crossroads: The Challenge of Fantasy
View
Profiles in Canadian Drama: James Reaney
View
Monty Python, Shakespeare and English Renaissance Drama
View
Modes of Faith: Secular Surrogates for Lost Religious …
View
Latino Los Angeles in Film and Fiction: The Cultural P…
View