The 20th and 21st centuries have continued the quest, so aptly described by G. K. Chesterton in 1906, to ‘find’ Charles Dickens and recapture the characteristically Dickensian. From research attempting to classify and categorise the nature of his popularity to a century of film adaptations, Dickens’s legacy encompasses an array of conventional and innovative forms.
Dickens After Dickens includes chapters from rising and leading scholars in the field, offering creative and varied discussion of the continued and evolving influence of Dickens and the nature of his legacy across the 19th, 20th and 21st centuries. Its chapters show the surprising resonances that Dickens has had and continues to have, arguing that the author’s impact can be seen in mainstream cultural phenomena such as HBO’s TV series The Wire and Donna Tartt’s novel The Goldfinch, as well as in diverse areas such as Norwegian literature, video games and neo-Victorian fiction. It discusses Dickens as a biographical figure, an intertextual moment, and a medium through which to explore contemporary concerns around gender and representation.
The new research represented in this book brings together a range of methodologies, approaches and sources, offering an accessible and engaging re-evaluation that will be of interest to scholars of Dickens, Victorian fiction, adaptation, and cultural history, and to teachers, students, and general readers interested in the ways in which we continue to read and be influenced by the author’s work.
This collection is edited by Dr Emily Bell (Loughborough University) with a Foreword by Professor Juliet John (Royal Holloway, University of London), author of Dickens and Mass Culture (OUP). Dr Bell is a board member for the Oxford Dickens series and an editor for the Dickens Letters Project. She also acted as the first Communications Committee Chair of the international Dickens Society, and has published on Dickens, life writing and commemoration.
Author(s): Emily Bell
Publisher: White Rose University Press
Year: 2020
Language: English
Tags: Victorian England, Victorian Fiction, Literary Criticism, English Fiction
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Author biographies
Foreword
Introduction
Chapter 1. ‘Once upon a time would not prove to be All-time or even a long time’
Chapter 2. Nordic Dickens
Chapter 3. Dickens and Faulkner
Chapter 4. ‘Awaiting the death blow’
Chapter 5. The Unfinished Picture
Chapter 6. ‘The Thing and Not the Thing’
Chapter 7. Little Nell in the Cyber Age
Chapter 8. Dickensian Realism in The Wire
Chapter 9. Grand Aspirations
Chapter 10. Fictional Dickenses
Chapter 11. Waiting, for Dickens
Index
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