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Victorian Culture And The Idea Of The Grotesque

  • Victorian Culture And The Idea Of The Grotesque
  • Attribution

    edited by Colin Trodd, Paul Barlow, and David Amigoni
  • Publication Details

    Book, Ashgate, 1999
  • Availability

    LOCATIONCALL #STATUS
     (LOWER LEVEL)  DA533 .V515 1999  AVAILABLE

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  • Authors

  • Subject

  • Places in this work

  • Notes

    • "These specially commissioned essays provide an original analysis of key articulations of the Grotesque: the literary culture of Ruskin, Browning and Dickens, where it is a sign of the eruptions, intensities, confusions and disturbed vitality of modern cultural experience; the scientific revolution associated with Darwin, where it generates speculation about biological forces, bodily energies and mutations in nature; the social and historical literature of Carlyle, where it hovers on the edge of visibility, at once a transgression of the nature of industrial society and its purest manifestation." "The invaluable introduction looks at proliferations of the Grotesque in Victorian culture. Dealing with literature, history, social theory, art, design, science, popular culture, art criticism and aesthetics, it seeks to demonstrate the connections and tensions between these orders of cultural life."–BOOK JACKET
  • Contents

    • Introduction: Uncovering the grotesque in Victorian culture
    • 1. ‘Borrowing Gargantua’s mouth’: biography, Bahktin and grotesque discourse - James Boswell, Thomas Carlyle and Leslie Stephen on Samuel Johnson / David Amigoni
    • 2. Thomas Carlyle’s grotesque conceits / Paul Barlow
    • 3. Culture and energy: Ford Madox Brown, Thomas Carlyle and the Cromwellian grotesque / Colin Trodd
    • 4. ‘Griffinism, grace and all’: the riddle of the grotesque in John Ruskin’s Modern Painters / Lucy Hartley
    • 5. Grotesque obscenities: Thomas Woolner’s Civilization and its discontents / Paul Barlow
    • 6. ‘Entangled banks’: Robert Browning, Richard Dadd and the Darwininan grotesque / Nicola Bown
    • 7. Monsters and monstrosities: grotesque taste and Victorian design / Shelagh Wilson
    • 8. Turning back the grotesque: G.F. Watts, the matter of painting and the oblivion of art / Colin Trodd
  • ISBN

    • 1859283802
  • LCCN

  • Open Library ID

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