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Form and realism in six novels of Anthony Trollope
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ISBN: 9027934649 9789027934642 Year: 1976 Volume: 87 Publisher: The Hague : Mouton,


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Trollope
Author:
ISBN: 0333187245 9780333187241 Year: 1975 Publisher: London : Macmillan,

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Anthony Trollope
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ISBN: 0224006118 9780224006118 Year: 1971 Publisher: London : Cape,

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Anthony Trollope and his contemporaries : a study in the theory and conventions of mid-Victorian fiction.
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ISBN: 0582500222 9780582500228 Year: 1972 Publisher: London Longman


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Realism's Empire : Empiricism and Enchantment in the Nineteenth-Century Novel
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ISBN: 9780814210987 0814210988 9780814291962 0814271405 0814256104 Year: 2009 Publisher: Columbus : The Ohio State University Press,

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Abstract

If realist novels are the literary avatars of secular science and rational progress, then why are so many canonical realist works organized around a fear of that progress? Realism is openly indebted, at the level of form and content, to imperialist and scientific advances. However, critical emphasis on this has obscured the extent to which major novelists of the period openly worried about the fate of mystery and the dissolution of tradition that accompanied science’s shrinking of the world. Realism’s modernization is inseparable from nostalgia. In Realism’s Empire: Empiricism and Enchantment in the Nineteenth-Century Novel, Geoffrey Baker demonstrates that realist fiction’s stance toward both progress and the foreign or supernatural is much more complex than established scholarship has assumed. The work of Honoré de Balzac, Anthony Trollope, and Theodor Fontane explicitly laments the loss of mystery in the world due to increased knowledge and exploration. To counter this loss and to generate the complications required for narrative, these three authors import peripheral, usually colonial figures into the metropolitan centers they otherwise depict as disenchanted and rationalized: Paris, London, and Berlin. Baker’s book examines the consequences of this duel for realist narrative and readers’ understandings of its historical moment. In so doing, Baker shows Balzac, Trollope, and Fontane grappling with new realities that frustrate their inherited means of representation and oversee a significant shift in the development of the novel.

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