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- catalog abstract "This book has two goals. One is to demonstrate that, pace many new historicist and neo-Marxist critics, the novel is "a mode of discourse potentially subversive of liberal categories and parameters" (6). The other is to intervene in a debate between liberal and "leftist" camps within Bakhtin studies by arguing that "Bakhtin's theories of the novel-tough-minded yet determined to credit the efficacy of human voices-will allow us to rediscover within that genre a margin of hope that cannot be mistaken for the product of sentimentality or wishful thinking" (94). The first goal participates in the effort to engage-rather than reject outright, or ignore-theories of ideology, power, and discourse deriving principally from Michel Foucault in such a way as to escape their over-determined and claustrophobic consequences. This corrective endeavor has inspired a number of useful studies from various critical viewpoints, including, most recently, John Kucich's The Power of Lies: Transgression in Victorian Fiction (1994) andJohn Maynard's Victorian Discourses on Sexuality and Religion (1994). -- from http://www.jstor.org (June 30, 2014).".
- catalog contributor b5777145.
- catalog created "c1994.".
- catalog date "1994".
- catalog date "c1994.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1994.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references and index.".
- catalog description "Novelistic form and the limits to cultural collaboration -- Wakefield's vicar, delinquent paragon -- The anti-romantic polemics of Mansfield Park -- Bildungsromans that aren't : Agnes Grey and Oliver Twist -- Foucault, Neo-marxism, and the cultural conversation -- Interminable conversations : social concord in Mary Barton and North and south -- Individual vs. collectivity in A tale of two cities -- Conclusion : does subversion make a difference?".
- catalog description "This book has two goals. One is to demonstrate that, pace many new historicist and neo-Marxist critics, the novel is "a mode of discourse potentially subversive of liberal categories and parameters" (6). The other is to intervene in a debate between liberal and "leftist" camps within Bakhtin studies by arguing that "Bakhtin's theories of the novel-tough-minded yet determined to credit the efficacy of human voices-will allow us to rediscover within that genre a margin of hope that cannot be mistaken for the product of sentimentality or wishful thinking" (94). The first goal participates in the effort to engage-rather than reject outright, or ignore-theories of ideology, power, and discourse deriving principally from Michel Foucault in such a way as to escape their over-determined and claustrophobic consequences. This corrective endeavor has inspired a number of useful studies from various critical viewpoints, including, most recently, John Kucich's The Power of Lies: Transgression in Victorian Fiction (1994) andJohn Maynard's Victorian Discourses on Sexuality and Religion (1994). -- from http://www.jstor.org (June 30, 2014).".
- catalog extent "xv, 203 p. ;".
- catalog hasFormat "Dialogics of dissent in the English novel.".
- catalog identifier "0874516668 (cl)".
- catalog isFormatOf "Dialogics of dissent in the English novel.".
- catalog issued "1994".
- catalog issued "c1994.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Hanover, NH : Published by University Press of New England,".
- catalog relation "Dialogics of dissent in the English novel.".
- catalog spatial "Great Britain".
- catalog subject "823.009/358 20".
- catalog subject "Dissenters in literature.".
- catalog subject "English fiction History and criticism.".
- catalog subject "Literature and society Great Britain History.".
- catalog subject "PR830.P6 B35 1994".
- catalog subject "Politics and literature Great Britain History.".
- catalog subject "Social problems in literature.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Novelistic form and the limits to cultural collaboration -- Wakefield's vicar, delinquent paragon -- The anti-romantic polemics of Mansfield Park -- Bildungsromans that aren't : Agnes Grey and Oliver Twist -- Foucault, Neo-marxism, and the cultural conversation -- Interminable conversations : social concord in Mary Barton and North and south -- Individual vs. collectivity in A tale of two cities -- Conclusion : does subversion make a difference?".
- catalog title "The dialogics of dissent in the English novel / Cates Baldridge.".
- catalog type "Criticism, interpretation, etc. fast".
- catalog type "History. fast".
- catalog type "text".