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- catalog contributor b12722069.
- catalog created "2003.".
- catalog date "2003".
- catalog date "2003.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "2003.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. 214-222) and index.".
- catalog description "Introduction: Master-slave relations, master-slave pacts -- 1. Capitalists, castrators and criminals: violent masters and slaves in Wilkie Collins' The woman in white -- 2. 'Servants' logic' and analytical chemistry: intellectual masters and servants in George Eliot and Charles Dickens -- 3. Slaveholders and democrats: combined masters and slaves in Thomas Carlyle, Charles Dickens' American notes and Frederick Douglass's Narrative -- 4. Heroes, hero-worshippers and Jews: music masters, slaves and servants in Thomas Carlyle, Richard Wagner, George Eliot and George Du Maurier -- 5. Stump orators, phantasm captains and mutual recognition: popular masters and masterlessness in Dickens' Hard times and Thomas Carlyle's 'Stump-orator' -- Afterword: After slavery, after shooting Niagara.".
- catalog extent "x, 229 p. :".
- catalog identifier "0333993128 (cloth)".
- catalog issued "2003".
- catalog issued "2003.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "New York : Palgrave Macmillan,".
- catalog subject "823/.809355 21".
- catalog subject "English fiction 19th century History and criticism.".
- catalog subject "English prose literature 19th century History and criticism.".
- catalog subject "Household employees in literature.".
- catalog subject "Master and servant in literature.".
- catalog subject "PR878.S47 T39 2003".
- catalog subject "Power (Social sciences) in literature.".
- catalog subject "Slavery in literature.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Introduction: Master-slave relations, master-slave pacts -- 1. Capitalists, castrators and criminals: violent masters and slaves in Wilkie Collins' The woman in white -- 2. 'Servants' logic' and analytical chemistry: intellectual masters and servants in George Eliot and Charles Dickens -- 3. Slaveholders and democrats: combined masters and slaves in Thomas Carlyle, Charles Dickens' American notes and Frederick Douglass's Narrative -- 4. Heroes, hero-worshippers and Jews: music masters, slaves and servants in Thomas Carlyle, Richard Wagner, George Eliot and George Du Maurier -- 5. Stump orators, phantasm captains and mutual recognition: popular masters and masterlessness in Dickens' Hard times and Thomas Carlyle's 'Stump-orator' -- Afterword: After slavery, after shooting Niagara.".
- catalog title "Mastery and slavery in Victorian writing / Jonathan Taylor.".
- catalog type "text".