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Sensation and Professionalism in the Victorian Novel

Book
Publication Date:
2015
abstract:
This book explores the extent to which four sensation novelists responded to the Victorian theorizing of professionalism. A crucial period of redefinition of the professional ideal, the third quarter of the nineteenth century also witnessed the rise of the sensation novel, a scandalous and electrifying form that challenged aesthetic and socio-cultural standards. Owing to their controversial position in the literary marketplace, novelists like Wilkie Collins, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Charles Reade and Ellen Wood developed a keen interest in professional issues, which occupy centre stage in their 1850s-70s narratives. By drawing on a variety of sociological, cultural and philosophical theories, Costantini skilfully assesses the ideological implications of the genre’s fictionalization of professionalism. She shows how sensation novelists provocatively represented the challenges faced by both elite and rising professionals, who are used as narrative vehicles for thorny discourses on authorship, ethicality, aestheticism and sociocultural identity.
Iris type:
3.1 Monografia o trattato scientifico
Keywords:
Victorian literature; professionalism; sensation novel; writers; journalists; painters; actors; doctors; lawyers; detectives; nurses; the woman question.
List of contributors:
Costantini, Mariaconcetta
Authors of the University:
COSTANTINI Mariaconcetta
Handle:
https://ricerca.unich.it/handle/11564/633710
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