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- 2012007346 contributor B12435450.
- 2012007346 created "2012.".
- 2012007346 date "2012".
- 2012007346 date "2012.".
- 2012007346 dateCopyrighted "2012.".
- 2012007346 description "Includes bibliographical references (p. 269-285) and index.".
- 2012007346 description "Machine generated contents note: Introduction: (unmerited) suffering and the uses of adversity in Victorian public discourse; 1. 'It is expedient that one man should die for the people': sympathy and substitution on the scaffold; 2. 'Fortune takes the place of guilt': narrative reversals and the literary afterlives of Eugene Aram; 3. 'Standing for' the people: Charles Dickens, Elizabeth Gaskell and professional oratory in 1848; 4. Sacrifice and the sufferings of the substitute: Dickens and the atonement controversy of the 1850s; 5. Substitution and imposture: George Eliot, Anthony Trollope and fictions of usurpation; Conclusion: innocence, sacrifice, and wrongful accusation in Victorian fiction.".
- 2012007346 extent "xi, 289 p. ;".
- 2012007346 identifier "9781107021266 (hardback)".
- 2012007346 identifier 9781107021266.jpg.
- 2012007346 isPartOf "Cambridge studies in nineteenth-century literature and culture ; 80".
- 2012007346 issued "2012".
- 2012007346 issued "2012.".
- 2012007346 language "eng".
- 2012007346 publisher "New York : Cambridge University Press,".
- 2012007346 subject "823/.809355 23".
- 2012007346 subject "Atonement in literature.".
- 2012007346 subject "English fiction 19th century History and criticism.".
- 2012007346 subject "LITERARY CRITICISM / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh. bisacsh".
- 2012007346 subject "PR468.S43 S37 2012".
- 2012007346 subject "Self in literature.".
- 2012007346 subject "Self-sacrifice in literature.".
- 2012007346 tableOfContents "Machine generated contents note: Introduction: (unmerited) suffering and the uses of adversity in Victorian public discourse; 1. 'It is expedient that one man should die for the people': sympathy and substitution on the scaffold; 2. 'Fortune takes the place of guilt': narrative reversals and the literary afterlives of Eugene Aram; 3. 'Standing for' the people: Charles Dickens, Elizabeth Gaskell and professional oratory in 1848; 4. Sacrifice and the sufferings of the substitute: Dickens and the atonement controversy of the 1850s; 5. Substitution and imposture: George Eliot, Anthony Trollope and fictions of usurpation; Conclusion: innocence, sacrifice, and wrongful accusation in Victorian fiction.".
- 2012007346 title "Atonement and self-sacrifice in nineteenth-century narrative / Jan-Melissa Schramm.".
- 2012007346 type "text".