Dickens and Democracy in the Age of Paper

Dickens and Democracy in the Age of Paper

Author: Carolyn Vellenga Berman

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2022-02-10

Total Pages: 496

ISBN-13: 0192659936

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This book examines Charles Dickens's fiction alongside publications emanating from Parliament. It argues that Dickens and Parliament were engaged in competitive efforts to represent the People at a crucial moment in the history of representative democracy--when the British government was under enormous political pressure to expand the franchise beyond a narrow band of male landowners. Contending that fiction and the literature of Parliament interacted at a host of levels--jostling one another in the same bookshops--it reads Dickens's novels in tandem with blue books, the practice texts of shorthand manuals, and Dickens's journalism. It shows how his fiction mocks parliamentary form (as in Pickwick Papers), canvasses the history of parliamentary representation (as in Bleak House), and depicts the relation of the People to the state as well as commerce (as in Little Dorrit). It thus rethinks the history of the Victorian novel by examining its rivalry with Parliament in the expanding world of print publication.


A Cultural History of Democracy in the Age of Empire

A Cultural History of Democracy in the Age of Empire

Author: Tom Brooking

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing

Published: 2022-12-15

Total Pages: 289

ISBN-13: 1350272752

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This volume surveys democracy broadly as a cultural phenomenon operating in different ways across a very wide range of societies in the nineteenth-century world. In the long nineteenth century, democracy evolved from a contested, maligned conception of government with little concrete expression at the level of the state, to a term widely associated with good governance throughout the diverse political cultures of the Atlantic world and beyond. The geographical scope and public range of discussions about the meaning of democracy in this era were unprecedented in comparison to previous centuries. These lively debates involved fundamental questions about human nature, and encompassed subjects ranging from the scope of the people who would participate in self-government to the importance of social and economic issues. For these reasons, the nineteenth century has proven the formative century in the modern history of democracy. Each chapter takes a different theme as its focus: sovereignty; liberty and the rule of law; the “common good”; economic and social democracy; religion and the principles of political obligation; citizenship and gender; ethnicity, race, and nationalism; democratic crises, revolutions, and civil resistance; international relations; and beyond the polis. These ten different approaches to democracy in the nineteenth century add up to an extensive, synoptic coverage of the subject.


The Age of Urban Democracy

The Age of Urban Democracy

Author: Donald Read

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2014-06-17

Total Pages: 531

ISBN-13: 1317895916

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This ambitious survey covers all aspects of the period in which English society acquired its modern shape -- industrial rather than agricultural, urban rather than rural, democratic in its institutions, and middle class rather than aristocratic in the control of political power. For this revised edition the footnotes and bibliography have been fully updated, and the entire text has been reset in a larger and more attractive format. An ideal introduction to the subject, it masters a huge amount of material through its clear structure, sensible judgements and approachable style.


The Age of Acrimony

The Age of Acrimony

Author: Jon Grinspan

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA

Published: 2021-04-27

Total Pages: 403

ISBN-13: 1635574633

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A penetrating, character-filled history “in the manner of David McCullough” (WSJ), revealing the deep roots of our tormented present-day politics. Democracy was broken. Or that was what many Americans believed in the decades after the Civil War. Shaken by economic and technological disruption, they sought safety in aggressive, tribal partisanship. The results were the loudest, closest, most violent elections in U.S. history, driven by vibrant campaigns that drew our highest-ever voter turnouts. At the century's end, reformers finally restrained this wild system, trading away participation for civility in the process. They built a calmer, cleaner democracy, but also a more distant one. Americans' voting rates crashed and never fully recovered. This is the origin story of the “normal” politics of the 20th century. Only by exploring where that civility and restraint came from can we understand what is happening to our democracy today. The Age of Acrimony charts the rise and fall of 19th-century America's unruly politics through the lives of a remarkable father-daughter dynasty. The radical congressman William “Pig Iron” Kelley and his fiery, Progressive daughter Florence Kelley led lives packed with drama, intimately tied to their nation's politics. Through their friendships and feuds, campaigns and crusades, Will and Florie trace the narrative of a democracy in crisis. In telling the tale of what it cost to cool our republic, historian Jon Grinspan reveals our divisive political system's enduring capacity to reinvent itself.


George Orwell: An age like this, 1920-1940

George Orwell: An age like this, 1920-1940

Author: George Orwell

Publisher: David R. Godine Publisher

Published: 2000

Total Pages: 602

ISBN-13: 9781567921335

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In his 46 years, Orwell managed to publish ten books and two collections of essays. This volume, one in a set of four, brings together a selection of his non-fiction work - letters, essays, reviews and journalism. His work is broad in scope, moving from English cooking to totalitarianism.


Literature and the Rise of the Interview

Literature and the Rise of the Interview

Author: Rebecca Roach

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2018-11-15

Total Pages: 294

ISBN-13: 019255932X

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Today interviews proliferate everywhere: in newspapers, on television, and in anthologies; as a method they are a major tool of medicine, the law, the social sciences, oral history projects, and journalism; and in the book trade interviews with authors are a major promotional device. We live in an 'interview society'. How did this happen? What is it about the interview form that we find so appealing and horrifying? Are we all just gossips or is there something more to it? What are the implications of our reliance on this bizarre dynamic for publicity, subjectivity, and democracy? Literature and the Rise of the Interview addresses these questions from the perspective of literary culture. The book traces the ways in which the interview form has been conceived and deployed by writers, and interviewing has been understood as a literary-critical practice. It excavates what we might call a 'poetics' of the interview form and practice. In so doing it covers 150 years and four continents. It includes a diverse rostrum of well-known writers, such as Henry James, T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, Djuna Barnes, William Burroughs, Philip Roth, J. M. Coetzee and Toni Morrison, while reintroducing some individuals that history has forgotten, such as Betty Ross, 'Queen of Interviewers', and Julian Hawthorne, Nathaniel's profligate son. Together these stories expose the interview's position in the literary imagination and consider what this might tell us about conceptions of literature, authorship, and reading communities in modernity.


Extraction Ecologies and the Literature of the Long Exhaustion

Extraction Ecologies and the Literature of the Long Exhaustion

Author: Elizabeth Carolyn Miller

Publisher: Princeton University Press

Published: 2021-10-12

Total Pages: 304

ISBN-13: 0691205531

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How literature of the British imperial world contended with the social and environmental consequences of industrial mining The 1830s to the 1930s saw the rise of large-scale industrial mining in the British imperial world. Elizabeth Carolyn Miller examines how literature of this era reckoned with a new vision of civilization where humans are dependent on finite, nonrenewable stores of earthly resources, and traces how the threatening horizon of resource exhaustion worked its way into narrative form. Britain was the first nation to transition to industry based on fossil fuels, which put its novelists and other writers in the remarkable position of mediating the emergence of extraction-based life. Miller looks at works like Hard Times, The Mill on the Floss, and Sons and Lovers, showing how the provincial realist novel’s longstanding reliance on marriage and inheritance plots transforms against the backdrop of exhaustion to withhold the promise of reproductive futurity. She explores how adventure stories like Treasure Island and Heart of Darkness reorient fictional space toward the resource frontier. And she shows how utopian and fantasy works like “Sultana’s Dream,” The Time Machine, and The Hobbit offer imaginative ways of envisioning energy beyond extractivism. This illuminating book reveals how an era marked by violent mineral resource rushes gave rise to literary forms and genres that extend extractivism as a mode of environmental understanding.


Critical Essays on Charles Dickens's A Tale of Two Cities

Critical Essays on Charles Dickens's A Tale of Two Cities

Author: Michael Cotsell

Publisher: Twayne Publishers

Published: 1998

Total Pages: 248

ISBN-13:

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This is a collection of critical essays on Charles Dickens's "A Tale of Two Cities" by Thomas Carlyle, Walter Bagehot, George Lukacs, Leonard Manheim, Nicholas Rance, Albert Hutter, and other writers.


IGNOU B ED Entrance Exam With Solved Paper 2020

IGNOU B ED Entrance Exam With Solved Paper 2020

Author: Arihant Experts

Publisher: Arihant Publications India limited

Published: 2019-11-30

Total Pages: 806

ISBN-13: 9324190717

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The Bachelor of Education (B.Ed.) programme of Indira Gandhi National Open University (IGNOU) has been designed with the aim to develop an understanding of teaching-learning process at secondary and senior-secondary level among student teachers. It focuses on enabling student-teachers to reflect critically on perspectives of education and integrate holistically the theory and practices to facilitate active engagement of learners for knowledge creation. The present edition of “IGNOU B. Ed. Extreme exam 2020” book is prepared to provide perfect study material that is required to clear this entrance paper. This book provides Model Solved Papers of 2019 in the starting so as to give the estimate on what pattern the paper could come so that preparation could be done accordingly. The whole syllabus divided into 2 parts that is further divided into sections and chapters by giving the complete coverage of syllabus. Each segment is carries ample amount of practice questions for the best outcome in the exam. ABOUT THE BOOK Model Solved Paper 2019, PART – A: General English Comprehension, Logical & Analytical Reasoning Ability, Educational & General Awareness, Technical – Learning and The School, PART – B: Science, Mathematics, Social Science, English, Samanya Hindi.