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  • 1
    Book
    Book
    Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press
    UID:
    b3kat_BV012611458
    Format: VIII, 248 S.
    Edition: 1. publ.
    ISBN: 0521623588
    Content: "The writers who are the focus of this study - Lawrence, Woolf, Bennett, Conrad, Forster, Galsworthy, and James - either admired Dostoevsky or feared him as monster who might dissolve all literary and cultural distinctions. Though their responses differed greatly, these writers were unanimous in their inability to recognize Dostoevsky as a literary artist. They viewed him instead as a psychologist, a mystic, a prophet, and, in the cases of Lawrence and Conrad, a hated rival who compelled creative response. This study constructs a map of English modernist novelists' misreadings of Dostoevsky, and in so doing it illuminates their aesthetic and cultural values and the nature of the modern English novel."--BOOK JACKET.
    Language: English
    Subjects: Slavic Studies , English Studies
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    Keywords: Dostoevskij, Fëdor Michajlovič 1821-1881 ; England ; Schriftsteller ; Moderne ; Dostoevskij, Fëdor Michajlovič 1821-1881 ; Englisch ; Roman ; Geschichte 1900-1930 ; Dostoevskij, Fëdor Michajlovič 1821-1881 ; Rezeption ; Englisch ; Literatur ; Geschichte 1900-1930
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  • 2
    UID:
    gbv_1636727131
    Format: 262 Seiten , 1 Illustration , 22 cm
    ISBN: 9781551119830
    Series Statement: Broadview editions
    Content: A Marriage Below Zero is the first novel in English to explicitly explore the subject of male homosexuality. Written by a British émigré to America, the New York theater critic Alfred J. Cohen, under the pseudonym of “Alan Dale,” this first-person narrative is told by a young Englishwoman, Elsie Bouverie, who gradually discovers that her new husband, Arthur Ravener, is romantically involved with another man. Denounced on publication (“a saturnalia in which the most monstrous forms of human vice exhibit themselves shamelessly,” wrote one reviewer), the novel was published during the public exposure of a London homosexual brothel frequented by upper-class men and telegraph boys. A Marriage Below Zero reflected late-nineteenth-century fears and anxieties about homosexuality, women’s position in marriage, and the threat that seemingly new, illicit forms of desire posed to marriageable women and to the Victorian family. This Broadview edition includes excerpts from the era’s pro-homosexual tracts, scientific and legal documents, contemporary feminist commentary on the new “dandyism,” and newspaper accounts of late-Victorian same-sex scandals. Highlights of the volume include excerpts from Charles Dickens’s 1836 account of his visit to Newgate Prison, where he witnessed the last two men in Britain executed for sodomy, George Bernard Shaw’s 1889 unpublished letter attacking the social purity movement’s legislation against homosexual men, and a never-before-reprinted 1898 article from Reynolds’s Newspaper, “Sex Mania,” that warned of an increasing number of homosexual men choosing to enter marriages as a cover for an illicit life.
    Note: Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 259-262
    Language: English
    Subjects: English Studies
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    Keywords: Großbritannien ; Homosexualität ; Geschichte 1836-1895 ; Fiktionale Darstellung
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