
The Oxford Handbook Of Charles Dickens Is A Comprehensive And Up-to-date Collection On Dickens's Life And Works. It Includes Original Chapters On All Of Dickens's Writing And New Considerations Of His Contexts, From The Social, Political, And Economic To The Scientific, Commercial, And Religious. The Contributions Speak In New Ways About His Depictions Of Families, Environmental Degradation, And Improvements Of The Industrial Age, As Well As The Law, Charity, And Communications. His Treatment Of Gender, His Mastery Of Prose In All Its Varieties And Genres, And His Range Of Affects And Dramatization All Come Under Stimulating Reconsideration. His Understanding Of British History, Of Empire And Colonization, Of His Own Nation And Foreign Ones, And Of Selfhood And Otherness, Like All The Other Topics, Is Explained In Terms Easy To Comprehend And Profoundly Relevant To Global Modernity.
This volume investigates the multifaceted legacy of Charles Dickens by synthesizing contemporary scholarship on his life, literary output, and historical context. Edited by Catherine Waters, John O. Jordan, and Robert L. Patten, the collection utilizes interdisciplinary approaches to re-examine Dickens's engagement with the social, political, and scientific currents of the nineteenth century.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this handbook as a rigorous academic resource that updates traditional Dickensian studies for a modern audience. Scholars frequently note the depth of the contributions, making it a standard reference for researchers and advanced students of Victorian literature.
Page Count:
848
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191061115
ISBN-13:
9780191061110
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