Arac, Jonathan.

Impure Worlds : The Institution of Literature in the Age of the Novel. - 1st ed. - 1 online resource (224 pages)

Intro -- Contents -- Preface -- 1. The Impact of Shakespeare: Goethe to Melville -- 2. The Media of Sublimity: Johnson and Lamb on King Lear -- 3. Hamlet, Little Dorrit, and the History of Character -- 4. The Struggle for the Cultural Heritage: Christina Stead Refunctions Charles Dickens and Mark Twain -- 5. The Birth of Huck's Nation -- 6. Narrative Form and Social Sense in Bleak House and The French Revolution -- 7. Rhetoric and Realism: Hyperbole in The Mill on the Floss -- 8. Rhetoric and Realism -- or, Marxism, Deconstruction, and Madame Bovary -- 9. Baudelaire's Impure Transfers: Allegory, Translation, Prostitution, Correspondence -- 10. Huckleberry Finn without Polemic -- Notes -- Index.

This book records a major critic's three decades of thinking about the connection between literature and the conditions of people's lives-that is, politics. A preference for impurity and a search for how to analyze and explain it are guiding threads in this book as its chapters pursue the complex entanglements of culture,politics, and society from which great literature arises.

9780823231805


Politics and literature - History - 19th century.


Electronic books.

PN3499 -- .A68 2011eb

809.393581