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Empty Houses (ebook)

Autor:David Kurnick;
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ISBN: EB9781400840090
Princeton University Press nos ofrece Empty Houses (ebook) en inglés, disponible en nuestra tienda desde el 05 de Diciembre del 2011.
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Co-Winner of the 2013 Sonia Rudikoff Prize, Northeast Victorian Studies Association
Shortlisted for the 2013 MSA Book Prize, Modernist Studies Association

"This brilliant book examines the close relations between theater and narrative fiction as the Anglophone novel took its famous interior turn between the mid-nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Drawing on a wide range of critical approaches to unsettle prevailing ideas about the antitheatrical bias of the novel and the increasing separation between the two genres, this will be recognized immediately as a mind-changing contribution to the history of the novel."--Rosemarie Bodenheimer, Boston College

"Through masterly analyses of what he strikingly calls 'the melancholy of generic distinction,' Kurnick explores the relations between personal psychology and collective aspirations, and between aesthetic expression and various social formations and the political imagination. Original and brilliantly argued, Empty Houses will permanently change the way we look at the history of the modern novel."--Leo Bersani, professor emeritus, University of California, Berkeley

"This book radiates an exciting and often inspiring critical intelligence. Kurnick demonstrates--in surprising, original, and thought-provoking detail--how the lapsed enterprise of playwriting rests at the uncanny center of the nineteenth- and twentieth-century novel. In the antagonistic and intimate relationship between the novel and public theater, Kurnick's book gives us an unexpected way to reconsider the novel's troubled, restless negotiations with its own generic identity."--Alex Woloch, Stanford University

"Empty Houses: Theatrical Failure and the Novel advances a sophisticated, highly nuanced argument about the relationship of drama, performance, and fiction. . . . Kurnick's argument . . . is formidable and skillfully executed. . . . [V]ery often brilliant and incisive."--Stephen Watt, James Joyce Literary Supplement

"Kurnick's thoughtful, subtle, well-argued book focuses on five writers closely associated with the movement toward, and the apotheosis of, interiority in the novel: Thackeray, George Eliot, Henry James, James Joyce, and James Baldwin. All had theatrical ambitions that were largely unsuccessful. Kurnick makes the case that the novel's shift from public spaces to psychological interior spaces is fraught with ambivalence, with 'longing references to the public worlds they would seem to have left behind.'"--Choice

"Kurnick has discerned a 'melancholy of generic distinction' whose ramifications far exceed the novels and novelists on whom he builds his argument."--Jonathan V. Farina, Wordsworth Circle

"Kurnick's radiant and rigorous book . . . has the rare quality of appealing to both theater and novel critics, and in bridging these worlds it enjoins us all to wider aspirations. . . . The argument is intricately nested and wrought in vivacious and exhilarating prose."--Daniel Williams, Modern Language Notes

"While Kurnick includes fascinating histories of both the nineteenth-century theatre and the allure it held for the aforementioned authors, as well as careful inclusions of other critical interpretations of the fictions he considers, it is Kurnick's own original and ground-breaking analyses of the impact of these unperformed plays, and plays that might have been, that make Empty Houses such a worthwhile read."--Susan Ray, George Eliot-George Henry Lewes Studies

"Kurnick writes with both precision and verve, and his wonderfully fine grained close readings are always in the service of his larger--sometimes breathtakingly large--claims. . . . This is an important book that demands to be pondered and deserves to be argued with--and applauded."--Daniel Hack, Nineteenth-Century Literature

Empty Houses, informed by Kurnick's nuanced and convincing formalist readings, is not only an important contribution to narrative theory and genre studies, but also offers insights into several issues that literary scholars have either dismissed or taken for granted, with authorial intention, literary failures, and canonicity being among them."--Philip Tsang, Textual Practice

"Another impressive study is David Kurnick's Empty Houses . . . Kurnick supports his argument with incisive, subtle readings of passages from major novels by his four authors as well as from such less frequently studied works as Thackeray's Lovel the Widower and George Eliot's The Spanish Gypsy."--John O. Jordan, SEL Studies in English Literature

"Erudite, nuanced, and utterly convincing. . . . Empty Houses must soon take its place in the canon of absolutely necessary studies of Victorian and later fiction."--Victorian Studies

"David Kurnick's dazzling new book, Empty Houses, draws much of its considerable force from its antipathy toward the traditional novel's psychosexual categories of identity and their ideological uses. Kurnick elaborates his elegant polemic through substantial and richly satisfying reinterpretations of works, both familiar and relatively neglected."--Joseph Litvak, Novel

"David Kurnick's rereading of the novel of interiority is undoubtedly far-reaching, yet it is far from monolithic. Part of the strength of his work lies in the varied texture that he gives to his ideas as he explores how writers spanning more than one-hundred years used their experiences with the theater to reshape their prose."--David Kornhaber, Ravon

"Empty Houses is an admirable book. Its willingness to question established views on the novel has enlightening results. In the boldness and originality of its arguments, it makes a valuable contribution not only to scholarship on the novelists it considers, but also more widely to our understanding of the novel as a genre."--Matthew Peters, Times Literary Supplement0Introduction Interiority and Its Discontents 1
Theater Demetaphorized 1
Theater Dethematized: Spatializations of the Novel 10
The Vocation of Failure 24

Chapter One: Acoustics in the Thackeray Theater 29
"The Play" 29
Trivializing History, or, Domesticity 33
Diminishing Returns: Vanity Fair?s Theatricality 42
The Box-Opener: A Note on Becky Sharp 50
Empty House Theatricals: The Wolves and the Lamb 53
In the Recess of Consciousness: Lovel the Widower 56

Chapter Two: George Eliot?s Lot 67
Theater and Abstraction 67
Romola, Felix Holt, and the Uses of Inwardness 74
The Spanish Gypsy?s Universal Theater 82
Middlemarch, Daniel Deronda, and the Cast of Mind 91

Chapter Three: Henry James?s Awkward Stage 105
Other Almost Anyhow 105
The Performance Imaginary: The Other House, 1896 113
The Performance Imaginary II: The Other House, 1909 121
In the Sociable Dusk of The Awkward Age 126
James and His Kind 136
What Does Jamesian Style Want? 144

Chapter Four: Joyce Unperformed 153
Joycean Exposures 153
Epiphany and the Obscene Body 158
Ibsen, Exiles, and the Scene of Sex 167
Backstage at the Library: "Scylla and Charybdis" 178
The Ineluctable Modality of the Legible: "Circe" 183

Epilogue In the Kingdom of Whomever: Baldwin?s
Method 192
Notes 207
Index 245

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