Romance's Rival: Familiar Marriage in Victorian Fiction
Autor Talia Schafferen Limba Engleză Electronic book text – 29 feb 2016
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190465100
ISBN-10: 0190465107
Pagini: 352
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190465107
Pagini: 352
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Schaffer's creative analysis of British romance novels plots reveals the anxiety and ambivalence many women felt about the emergence of love as the primary motive for marriage. This engrossing book reminds us that there were several historical alternatives to our contemporary ideas about love, desire, and sexuality.
Romance's Rival joins Sharon Marcus's Between Women and Mary Jean Corbett's Family Likeness in offering a radical new reading of the nineteenth-century marriage plot. Schaffer's approach revolutionizes critical understandings of the novel and grants fiction the power to challenge and rewrite anthropological accounts of marriage and even Foucault's repressive hypothesis.
Romance's Rival directs our eyes to a feature of Victorian fiction that has always been in plain sight but remarkably hard to see: the structural importance of marriages that prioritize social, not sexual, relations. Schaffer's fast-paced and engaging study de-emphasizes erotic desire to deliver a surprisingly racy read, provocatively unsettling our understanding of some of the best-loved novels in the canon.
A brilliantly argued analysis, Romance's Rival reveals a major lacuna in the dominant understanding of domestic fiction by tracing the rise and fall of alternatives to romance. In this elegant, insightful study, Talia Schaffer effectively reconceives the relation between the history of marriage and marriage fiction, drawing on both celebrated and obscure examples in an original and comprehensive fashion.
In the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century marriage plots we all thought we knew so well, Talia Schaffer has discovered a surprisingly formidable rival to the rebellious impulses of romantic love: the communitarian urges of familiar affection. While exploring the dynamic interactions of these two drives in the novels, she takes us on a fascinating tour of the changing and competing modes of subjectivity, desire, and individual agency.
Romance's Rival joins Sharon Marcus's Between Women and Mary Jean Corbett's Family Likeness in offering a radical new reading of the nineteenth-century marriage plot. Schaffer's approach revolutionizes critical understandings of the novel and grants fiction the power to challenge and rewrite anthropological accounts of marriage and even Foucault's repressive hypothesis.
Romance's Rival directs our eyes to a feature of Victorian fiction that has always been in plain sight but remarkably hard to see: the structural importance of marriages that prioritize social, not sexual, relations. Schaffer's fast-paced and engaging study de-emphasizes erotic desire to deliver a surprisingly racy read, provocatively unsettling our understanding of some of the best-loved novels in the canon.
A brilliantly argued analysis, Romance's Rival reveals a major lacuna in the dominant understanding of domestic fiction by tracing the rise and fall of alternatives to romance. In this elegant, insightful study, Talia Schaffer effectively reconceives the relation between the history of marriage and marriage fiction, drawing on both celebrated and obscure examples in an original and comprehensive fashion.
In the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century marriage plots we all thought we knew so well, Talia Schaffer has discovered a surprisingly formidable rival to the rebellious impulses of romantic love: the communitarian urges of familiar affection. While exploring the dynamic interactions of these two drives in the novels, she takes us on a fascinating tour of the changing and competing modes of subjectivity, desire, and individual agency.
Notă biografică
Talia Schaffer is Professor of English at Queens College and The Graduate Center, City University of New York. She is the author of Novel Craft: Victorian Domestic Handicraft and Nineteenth-Century Fiction and The Forgotten Female Aesthetes: Literary Culture in Late-Victorian England.