The Argosy

The Argosy
Author: Mrs. Henry Wood
Publisher:
Total Pages: 522
Release: 1887
Genre: English fiction
ISBN:

A magazine of tales, travels, essays, and poems.

British Women's Writing from Brontë to Bloomsbury, Volume 2

British Women's Writing from Brontë to Bloomsbury, Volume 2
Author: Adrienne E. Gavin
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 307
Release: 2020-08-26
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 3030385280

This five-volume series, British Women’s Writing From Brontë to Bloomsbury, 1840–1940, historicallycontextualizes and traces developments in women’s fiction from 1840 to 1940. Critically assessingboth canonical and lesser-known British women’s writing decade by decade, it redefines the landscapeof women’s authorship across a century of dynamic social and cultural change. With each ofits volumes devoted to two decades, the series is wide in scope but historically sharply defined. Volume 2: 1860s and 1870s continues the series by historically and culturally contextualizing Victorianwomen’s writing distinctly within the 1860s and 1870s. Covering a range of fictional approaches,including short stories, religiously inflected novels, and comic writing the volume’s 16 original essaysconsider such developments as the sensation craze, the impact of new technologies, and the careeropportunities opening for women. Centrally, it reassesses key nineteenth-century female authors inthe context in which they first published while also recovering neglected women writers who helpedto shape the literary landscape of the 1860s and 1870s.

Formal Investigations: Aesthetic Style in Late-Victorian and Edwardian Detective Fiction

Formal Investigations: Aesthetic Style in Late-Victorian and Edwardian Detective Fiction
Author: Paul Fox
Publisher: ibidem-Verlag / ibidem Press
Total Pages: 285
Release: 2014-05-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 3838265939

The essays in this revised and expanded volume explore a variety of structuring taxonomies, the relationships between the aesthetic forms, styles and methodologies of detective and crime fiction in the late-Victorian and Edwardian period. The influences on the artists in the genre are as varied as the interests of the period in scientific method, forensics, archaeology, aesthetics, medicine, and the paranormal. But the formalizing tendencies of investigative process remain, and it is this adherence, in artist and detective alike, to seeing crime and its resolution as a stylistic imposition of structure on disorder that is under examination.