12 research outputs found
The Victorian Newsletter (Spring 1976)
The Victorian Newsletter is sponsored for the English X Group of the Modern Language Association by New York University and Queens College, City University of New York.Desperate Remedies: Sensation Novels of the 1860s / Elaine Showalter -- "Feeling Hot": Victorian Drama and the Censors / John R. Elliott, Jr. -- A Straight Bat and a Modest Mind / Coral Lansbury -- Hymns for Children: Cultural Imperialism in Victorian England / Susan S. Tamke -- Arnold's Two Regions of Form / Mary W. Schneider -- The Double Narrator in The Amazing Marriage / Robert M. DeGraaff -- Stammering in the Dodgson Family: An Unpublished Letter by 'Lewis Carroll' / Joseph Sigman and Richard Slobodin -- Recent Publications: A Selected List / Arthur F. Minerof -- Victorian Group New
Human-animal elision: a Darwinian universe in George Eliotâs novels
No abstract available
Chronology and Statistics : Objective Understanding of Authorial Meaning
This paper is an attempt to prove that chronology and statistics are the effective means for objective interpretation of authorial meaning. In defence of his hermeneutic theory against Eagletonâs liberal-humanistic opposition, Hirsch asserts no other object can be the norm of literary criticism than authorial meaning. One of the most useful tools for the objective detection of authorial meaning is the Sanger-Kroeber methodâSangerâs chronological study of the structure of fiction and Kroeberâs statistical quantification of formal elements. Its application to the analysis of Elizabeth Gaskellâs Mary Barton reveals that the novelâs central protagonist is the eponymous heroine, not her father as has been conventionally considered. Subjective readings will be superseded by new ones. But, readings based on objective data will not