Media, Technology, and Literature in the Nineteenth Century H 316 p. 11
Linley, Margaret 著
目次
Contents: Introduction: the 19th-century invention of media, Colette Colligan and Margaret Linley; Section 1 Image: The Wordsworths' daffodils: on the page, upon the inward eye, in their media ecology, Richard Menke; 'So that the sense of touch may supply the want of sight': blind reading and 19th-century British print culture, Vanessa Warne; A literature of its own: time, space, and narrative mediations in Victorian photography, Daniel A. Novak; Kaleidoscopic vision in late Victorian Bohemia: George Sims's social kaleidoscope, Helen Groth. Section 2 Sound: A modern poetry of sensation: three Christmas gift books and the legacy of Victorian material culture, Lorraine Janzen Kooistra; Visible sound and auditory scenes: word, image, and music in Tennyson, D.G. Rossetti and Morris, Linda K. Hughes; Piano, telegraph, typewriter: listening to the language of touch, Ivan Raykoff. Section 3 Touch: Tactile modernity: on the rationalization of touch in the 19th century, David P. Parisi; Teleny, the secret touch, and the media geography of the clandestine book trade (1880–1900), Colette Colligan; Touching at a distance: telegraphy, gender, and Henry James's In the Cage, Christopher Keep; Frankenstein revisited: life and afterlife around 1831, Margaret Linley; Index.
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