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Everyday Words and the Character of Prose in Nineteenth-Century Britain
About this book
Everyday Words and the Character of Prose in Nineteenth-Century Britain is an original and innovative study of the stylistic tics of canonical novelists including Austen, Dickens, Trollope, Thackeray and Eliot. Jonathan Farina shows how ordinary locutions such as 'a decided turn', 'as if' and 'that sort of thing' condense nineteenth-century manners, tacit aesthetics and assumptions about what counts as knowledge. Writers recognized these recurrent 'everyday words' as signatures of 'character'. Attending to them reveals how many of the fundamental forms of characterizing fictional characters also turn out to be forms of characterizing objects, natural phenomena and inanimate, abstract things, such as physical laws, the economy and legal practice. Ultimately, this book revises what 'character' meant to nineteenth-century Britons by respecting the overlapping, transdisciplinary connotations of the category.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Half-title page
- Series page
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- List of Abbreviations
- Chapter 1 Darwinâs View from Todgersâs: âA decided turnâ for Character and Common Words
- Chapter 2 Inductive âAttentionsâ: Jane Austen in âParticularâ and in âGeneralâ
- Chapter 3 âOur skeptical as ifâ: Conditional Analogy and the Comportment of Victorian Prose
- Chapter 4 âSomethingâ in the Way Realism Moves: Middlemarch and Oblique Character References
- Chapter 5 âWhoever explains a âbutââ: Tact and Friction in Trollopeâs Reparative Fiction
- Afterword: The Fate of Character and the Philology of Everyday Life
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index