Feeling Subjects: Sensibility's Mobius Strip and the Public-Private Subject in Later Eighteenth-Century British Fiction
Feeling Subjects investigates sensibility in relation to the production of subjectivity in the later eighteenth century. It creates a model of sensibility as a discursive space bringing together literary, philosophical, and medical understandings of feeling. It argues that sensibility’s discursive s...
Main Author: | McNeill-Bindon, Susan Colleen |
---|---|
Other Authors: | Binhammer, Katherine (English and Film Studies) |
Format: | Others |
Language: | en |
Published: |
2009
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10048/582 |
Similar Items
-
Literary Objects in Eighteenth-Century British Literature
by: Lyons-McFarland, Helen Michelle
Published: (2018) -
In the Mind's Eye: Associationism and Style in the Nineteenth-Century British Novel
by: Aschkenes, Deborah
Published: (2015) -
“The Philosophy of Tears”: Sense(s) and sensibility in some graveyard poems
by: John Baker
Published: (2016-12-01) -
Passionate Philosophy: Amatory Fiction in the Eighteenth-Century Periodical, 1744-1762
by: Pahl, Chance David
Published: (2018) -
Sensibility and Subjectivity: Levinas’ Traumatic Subject
by: Rashmika Pandya
Published: (2011-02-01)