The Locator -- [(subject = "Dead in literature")]

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Author:
McAllister, David (Professor of Victorian studies), author.
Title:
Imagining the dead in British literature and culture, 1790-1848 / David McAllister.
Publisher:
Palgrave Macmillan,
Copyright Date:
2018
Description:
viii, 227 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Subject:
English fiction--18th century--History and criticism.
English fiction--19th century--History and criticism.
Dead in literature.
Death--Great Britain.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 205-221) and index.
Contents:
Introduction: revolutionising the dead: Burke, Paine, De Quincey -- Burial, community, and the domestic affections in Wordsworth's Lyrical Ballads -- 'The feelings of the living and the rights of the dead': ethics and emotions; bodies and burial; Godwin and Bentham -- Death in the schoolroom: associationist education and children's poetry books -- Dickens's 'better thoughts of death': psychology, sentimentalism, and the garden-cemetery aesthetic of The Old Curiosity Shop.
Summary:
"This book offers the first account of the dead as an imagined community in the early nineteenth-century. It examines why Romantic and Victorian writers (including Wordsworth, Dickens, De Quincey, Godwin, and D'Israeli) believed that influencing the imaginative conception of the dead was a way to either advance, or resist, social and political reform. This interdisciplinary study contributes to the burgeoning field of Death Studies by drawing on the work of both canonical and lesser-known writers, reformers, and educationalists to show how both literary representation of the dead, and the burial and display of their corpses in churchyards, dissecting-rooms, and garden cemeteries, responded to developments in literary aesthetics, psychology, ethics, and political philosophy. Imagining the Dead in British Literature and Culture, 1790-1848 shows that whether they were lauded as exemplars or loathed as tyrants, rendered absent by burial, or made uncannily present through exhumation and display, the dead were central to debates about the shape and structure of British society as it underwent some of the most radical transformations in its history"--Back cover.
ISBN:
331997730X
9783319977300
OCLC:
(OCoLC)1042419387
LCCN:
2018952370
Locations:
USUX851 -- Iowa State University - Parks Library (Ames)

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