

An edition of The Victorian social-problem novel (1996)
the market, the individual, and communal life
By JosephineM Guy
Publish Date
1996
Publisher
St. Martin's Press,Palgrave Macmillan
Language
eng
Pages
238
Description:
The critical history of Victorian social-problem novels maps many of the changes in the theory and practice of literary history in the second half of the twentieth century. Josephine M. Guy's account of various critical responses to these enduringly popular works examines a range of approaches, particulary those of historicist, new-historicist and Marxist critics. Her own critical account of the sub-genre is built around close readings of such core texts as Hard Times, Mary Barton, North and South, Sybil, Alton Locke and Felix Holt. By focusing on the intellectual context in which these novels were produced - on the Victorians' debates about 'the social'and their understanding of what is meant by a 'social problem' - she recharacterises an important moment in mid-nineteenth-century literary history.
subjects: Community life in literature, Didactic fiction, English, English Didactic fiction, English fiction, History, History and criticism, Individualism in literature, Literature and history, Literature and society, Social problems in literature, English fiction, history and criticism, 19th century, Great britain, history, 19th century, Community life, Individualism, Didactic fiction, history and criticism
Places: Great Britain
Times: 19th century