Victorian Hauntings asks its reader to consider the following
questions: What does it mean to read or write with ghosts, or to
suggest that acts of reading or writing are haunted? In what ways can
authors in the nineteenth century be read so as to acknowledge the
various phantom effects which return within their texts? In what ways
do the traces of such "ghost writing" surface in the works of Dickens,
Tennyson, Eliot and Hardy? How does the work of spectrality, revenance
and the uncanny transform materially both the forms of the literary in
the Victorian era and our reception of it today? Beginning with an
expoloration of matters of haunting, the uncanny, the gothic and the
spectral, Julian Wolfreys traces the ghostly resonances at work in
Victorian writing and how such persistence addresses isues of memory
and responsibility which haunt the work of reading. 'Taking the
familiar genre of the Gothic as a point of departure and revisiting it
through Derridean theory, Wolfreys' book, the first application of
"hauntology" to the domain of Victorian Studies is a remarkable
achievement. Wolfreys never reduces reading to instrumentality but
remains alert to all the potentialities of the texts he reads with a
great attention to their idiosyncrasies. Victorian Hauntings should
bring a new tone to Victorian Studies, this clever book is quite
perfect.' - Jean Michel Rabate, Professor of English, University of
Pennsylvania 'You'd have to be dead to know more about ghosts than
Julian Wolfreys.' - Martin McQuillan, University of Leeds
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Spectrality, Gothic, the Uncanny and Literature
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781350317710
Publisert
2021
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Bloomsbury Academic
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter