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Our Mutual Friend (1864-5) Dickens' last completed novel, has been
critically praised as a profound and troubled masterpiece, and yet
is has received far less scholarly attention than his other major
works. This volume is the first book-length study of the novel. It
explores every aspect of Dickens' sustained imaginative involvement
with his age. In particular its original research into hitherto
neglected sources reveals not only Dickens' reactions to the
important developments during the 1860s in education, finance and
the administration of poverty, but also his interest in phenomena
as diverse as waste collection and the Shakespeare tercentenary.
The Companion to Our Mutual Friend demonstrates the varied
resources of artistry that inform the novel, and it provides the
reader with a fundamental source of information about one of
Dickens' most complex works.
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Our Mutual Friend (Paperback)
Charles Dickens; Edited by Michael Cotsell
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R299
R257
Discovery Miles 2 570
Save R42 (14%)
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Following his father's death John Harmon returns to London to claim
his inheritance, but he finds he is eligible only if he marries
Bella Wilfur. To observe her character he assumes another identity
and secures work with his father's foreman, Mr Boffin, who is also
Bella's guardian.
Disguise and concealment play an important role in the novel and
individual identity is examined within the wider setting of London
life: in the 1860s the city was aflame with spiralling financial
speculation while thousands of homeless scratched a living from the
detritus of the more fortunate-indeed John Harmon's father has
amassed his wealth by recycling waste.
This edition includes extensive explanatory notes and significant
manuscript variants.
About the Series: For over 100 years Oxford World's Classics has
made available the broadest spectrum of literature from around the
globe. Each affordable volume reflects Oxford's commitment to
scholarship, providing the most accurate text plus a wealth of
other valuable features, including expert introductions by leading
authorities, voluminous notes to clarify the text, up-to-date
bibliographies for further study, and much more.
The Theater of Trauma is a groundbreaking re-reading of the
relations between psychology and drama in the age of Eugene
O'Neill, Susan Glaspell, and their many brilliant contemporaries.
American modernist Theater of Trauma drew its vision from the
psychological investigation of trauma and its consequences - among
them hysteria and dissociation - made by French and American
psychiatrists such as the great Pierre Janet, Alfred Binet, William
James, Morton Prince, and W.E.B. Du Bois; the European and American
« dissociationist culture that developed around their work; and the
resulting trauma of World War I. American dramatists' deep
resistance to Freud's suppression of trauma challenges the equation
of Freud and modernism that has become commonplace in modernist
criticism.
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