The Location of Experience

FORDHAM UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9781531508616

Victorian Women Writers, the Novel, and the Feeling of Living

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By Adela Pinch
Imprint:
FORDHAM UNIVERSITY PRESS
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Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
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Pages:
277

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Description

Adela Pinch is Professor of English at the University of Michigan. She is the author of Strange Fits of Passion: Epistemologies of Emotion, Hume to Austen (1996), and Thinking about Other People in Nineteenth-Century British Writing (2010).

Introduction 1 Experience on the Move: Transitioning, Transferring, Containing, 3 * Narrative Relations, Novel Worlds, 7 * The Organization of This Book, 10 * Women Writers, Women Readers, Feminist Theory, 12 * Acknowledgments, 15 1 Transfers of Experience: Brontes, Gaskell, Meynell, Sinclair 18 Introduction, 18 * Experience in Victorian Philosophy, 22 * The Brontes and Experience, 29 * May Sinclair, 33 * A Distributed-Bronte Theory of Experience, 37 * Images of Haworth, 40 * Coda: Little Brontes, 50 2 The Story of O: Margaret Oliphant and Anti-metalepsis 56 Introduction, 56 * The Story of O, 60 * "No One to Interfere," 63 * "Let Me In!," 68 * The Story of "Oh!," 75 * The O of Experience and the World Stack, 81 3 George Eliot and Prolepsis: Prediction, Prevention, Protection 85 Introduction: Rethinking Prolepsis, 85 * Beginnings and Endings, 93 * The Future in "The Lifted Veil," 95 * Predicting the End in The Mill on the Floss, 98 * Will, Determinism, Necessity, and Narration, 103 * Development, Education, and the Futures of The Mill on the Floss, 108 * Coda: Silas Marner, 111 4 Regret, Remorse, and Realism in Elizabeth Gaskell 117 Introduction, 117 * Half-Mended Stockings, 123 * Lines and Angles, 126 * What Never Happened, 133 * Remorse, Narration, Description, 136 Coda 144 Notes 151 Bibliography 189 Index 209

The relationship between experience and realism, what it means and what it feels like to read fiction: in Adela Pinch's hands, these longstanding questions come to seem newly strange and newly fascinating. Part of her genius lies in considering how formal problems intersect not just with the experience of reading, but with what we read for: how we think about care, human vulnerability, and our existence in and through others. The Location of Experience will be required--and deeply pleasurable--reading for all who are interested in the novel, the Victorian period, or what 'counts' as experience in the first place.---Rachel Ablow, University at Buffalo, SUNY This impressive and beautifully written book models a new way of understanding Victorian realism and the enduring compacts it makes with generations of devoted readers. Pinch unfolds a set of arguments linked by a carefully historicized conception of experience: its putative presence or absence as a precondition for imaginative writing; the way family feeling reverberates through narrative choice; the two-way tug of desire and prohibition in the plotting of character trajectories.---Vanessa Smith, University of Sydney

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