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Invisible Architecture In Nineteenthcentury Literature Ben Moore

  • SKU: BELL-59603314
Invisible Architecture In Nineteenthcentury Literature Ben Moore
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Invisible Architecture In Nineteenthcentury Literature Ben Moore instant download after payment.

Publisher: EUP
File Extension: PDF
File size: 11.25 MB
Author: Ben Moore
ISBN: 9781399508483, 1399508482
Language: English
Year: 2024

Product desciption

Invisible Architecture In Nineteenthcentury Literature Ben Moore by Ben Moore 9781399508483, 1399508482 instant download after payment.

[headline]Rethinks the relationship between architecture, literature and (in)visibility in the nineteenth-century city Ben Moore presents a new approach to reading urban modernity in nineteenth-century literature, by bringing together hidden, mobile and transparent features of city space as part of a single system he calls 'invisible architecture'. Resisting narratives of the nineteenth-century as progressing from concealment to transparency, he instead argues for a dynamic interaction between these tendencies. Across two parts, this book addresses a range of apparently disparate buildings and spaces. Part I offers new readings of three writers and their cities: Elizabeth Gaskell and Manchester, Charles Dickens and London, and Émile Zola and Paris, focusing on the cellar-dwelling, the railway and river, and the department store respectively. Part II takes a broader view by analysing three spatial forms that have not usually been considered features of nineteenth-century modernity: the Gothic cathedral, the arabesque and white walls. Through these readings, the book extends our understanding of the uneven modernity of this period. [bio]Ben Moore is Assistant Professor in English Literature at the University of Amsterdam, Netherlands. He is the author of Human Tissue in the Realist Novel, 1850-1895 (2023) and Co-Editor of the Gaskell Journal. His work has appeared in journals including Victorian Literature and Culture, Modernism/modernity, Modern Language Review and the Journal of Victorian Culture, as well as in various handbooks and edited collections.

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