Books, Readers and Libraries in Fiction
eBook - ePub

Books, Readers and Libraries in Fiction

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Books, Readers and Libraries in Fiction

About this book

It is easy to find books and libraries within fiction from the earliest times onwards in works for all age groups, in canonical literature and in books that form part of popular culture. From Don Quixote to Louisa M. Alcott's March girls and Terry Pratchett's Unseen University wizards, the reading material of fictional personae is part of their characterisation; we are often reading readers. This volume breaks new ground in offering a chronological range of essays exploring the depiction of books, libraries and reading specifically in fiction from the medieval period to the present. Through detailed case studies from primarily British fiction that address common themes such as gender, genre and the relation between reading and writing itself, the collection examines the ways in which authors of fiction mediate and interpret books, libraries, and the act of reading to their own readers. Fiction enables writers to teach readers how to read, but it can also portray subversive acts of reading that engage with contemporary cultural anxieties or moral debates. The volume draws on approaches from literary studies, book history, library history, and theories and histories of reading, to examine what fictional representations of reading tell us about changing cultural attitudes to different reading practices, and the use (and abuse) of books beyond actual reading, both in the context of specific works and about the reception of books more widely.

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Yes, you can access Books, Readers and Libraries in Fiction by Karen Attar,Andrew Nash in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Literary Criticism History & Theory. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Contents
  5. List of figures
  6. Notes on contributors
  7. Acknowledgements
  8. Introduction: books, reading and libraries in fiction
  9. 1. Reading envisioned in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries
  10. 2. ‘The gay part of reading’: corruption through reading?
  11. 3. ‘Fling Peregrine Pickle under the toilet’: reading fiction together in the eighteenth century
  12. 4. Jane Austen’s refinement of the intradiegetic novel reader in Northanger Abbey: a study in Ricoeurian hermeneutics of recuperation
  13. 5. Evaluating negative representations of reading: Ivan Turgenev’s Faust (1855)
  14. 6. ‘I spent all yesterday trying to read’: reading in the face of existential threat in Bram Stoker’s Dracula
  15. 7. ‘Into separate brochures’: stitched work and a new New Testament in Thomas Hardy’s Jude the Obscure
  16. 8. ‘A fire fed on books’: books and reading in D. H. Lawrence’s Sons and Lovers
  17. 9. ‘I sometimes like to read a novel’: books and reading in Victorian adventure romance
  18. 10. When it isn’t cricket: books, reading and libraries in the girls’ school story
  19. 11. The body in the library in the fiction of Agatha Christie and her ‘Golden Age’ contemporaries
  20. 12. ‘Very nearly magical’: books and their readers in Terry Pratchett’s Discworld series
  21. Index