The nostalgia for novelty: Revivals of the eighteenth century novel, genuine and spurious
Revivals of the eighteenth century novel and revivals of material culture are closely related. Whether one is mourning the lost bagel of the past or the lost novel, a complex form of nostalgia is at work. Historians of the novel Ian Watt, Michael McKeon, J. Paul Hunter, Lennard Davis, and many other...
Main Author: | Sadow, Jonathan B |
---|---|
Language: | ENG |
Published: |
ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst
2004
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3152741 |
Similar Items
-
GODDESS, FAIRY MISTRESS, AND SOVEREIGNTY: WOMEN OF THE IRISH SUPERNATURAL
by: CLARK, ROSALIND ELIZABETH
Published: (1985) -
The Way to Otranto: Gothic Elements in Eighteenth-Century English Poetry, 1717-1762
by: Samoorian, Vahe
Published: (1970) -
By a gentle force compell'd: An analysis of rape in eighteenth-century English fact and fiction
by: Constantine, Stephen M
Published: (2006) -
How Allegories Mean in the Novel: From Personification to Impersonation in Eighteenth-Century British Fiction
by: Lee, Janet Min
Published: (2015) -
The construction of gendered character in eighteenth-century British women's fiction
by: Lieske, Pamela Jean
Published: (1996)