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"With the novelistic achievements of Joyce, Proust, and Woolf in mind, we have come to understand the novel as an art form intimately tied to the impulses and processes of memory, and novel writing as a heroic act of preservation. However, in the Victorian novel, as Nicholas Dames contends in this original study, memory is less a valorized theme than a dilemma or a threat.
Based on an investigation of representative British novels during the years 1810-1870, Amnesiac Selves shows that the Victorian novel bears no such secure relation to memory, and, in fact, it tries to hide, evade, and eliminate detailed remembrance. Dames argues that the notable scarcity and distinct unease of representations of recollection in the nineteenth-century novel signal an art form struggling to define and construct new concepts of memory.
By placing nineteenth-century British fiction from Jane Austen to Wilkie Collins alongside a wide variety of Victorian psychologies and theories of mind, Dames evokes a novelistic world and a culture engaged in forming a modern nostalgia whose origins our own time has largely forgotten."--BOOK JACKET.
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
History and criticism, Nostalgia in literature, Amnesia in literature, Loss (Psychology) in literature, Psychological fiction, English, Autobiographical memory in literature, English fiction, Self in literature, Memory in literature, English Psychological fiction, English fiction, history and criticism, 19th century, Psychological fiction, history and criticismTimes
19th centuryShowing 2 featured editions. View all 2 editions?
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1
Amnesiac Selves: Nostalgia, Forgetting, and British Fiction, 1810-1870
October 17, 2003, Oxford University Press, USA
in English
0195173090 9780195173093
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2
Amnesiac selves: nostalgia, forgetting, and British fiction, 1810-1870
2001, Oxford University Press
in English
0195143574 9780195143577
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Book Details
First Sentence
"Replacing Barthes's hypostatized "Novel" with a historically defined set of "novels," we might say that transforming memories into useful acts - enabling, in fact, the death of memory within it - is preeminently the work of the Victorian novel."
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