Critical Masses

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A01=Jesse Cordes Selbin
Aesthetic
Analysis
Analytic
Audiences
Author_Jesse Cordes Selbin
Barton
Caroline
Cassell
Category=DS
Category=DSBF
Category=JNB
Clavigera
close reading
critical thinking
Criticism
Critics
Critique
Culture
Daniel
Deronda
education
Eliot
Epigraphs
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Faculties
Felix
fiction
Formal
formalism
Fors
forthcoming
Gaskell
George
Heart
Industrial
Interpretation
Interpretive
Knowledge
literacy
literary criticism
literary studies
Literature
Lucy
Mary
Mass
mass culture
method
Modern
Moral
narrative
New Criticism
Novel
novel theory
Novelists
Opens
periodicals
Popular
Popular criticism
Popular critics
populism
Practical Criticism
Protagonist
readers
reading
Ruskin
Scott
Scrutiny
Shirley
Stone
the novel
Thinspace
Victorian
Villette
William

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691286716
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Dec 2026
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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How close reading developed as an essential tool of critical thinking and democratic citizenship

For the past century, close reading has been seen as a specialized academic enterprise: the invention of professional scholars and critics. Yet in nineteenth-century Britain, the technique was widely framed as an instrument of the masses, a vehicle of collective uplift, and a vital facilitator of what we now call “critical thinking.” In Critical Masses, Jesse Cordes Selbin unearths the Victorian prehistory of close reading, showing how its primary practitioners operated outside academic institutions and cast their work as crucial to democratic engagement among an increasingly literate and enfranchised populace.

Cordes Selbin traces the tradition of the “Popular Critics”: cultural critics, educators, journalists, and novelists who promoted close reading as a tool of critical analysis among popular audiences, particularly workers and women. Popular Criticism, she demonstrates, anticipated the later academic approaches of Practical Criticism and New Criticism. She chronicles the efforts of working-class editor John Cassell to promote close reading to laborers and solicit their contributions, and John Ruskin’s late-career theories of textual interpretation. Cordes Selbin argues that Charlotte Brontë, Elizabeth Gaskell, and George Eliot expanded the mission of Popular Criticism by crafting novels to elicit close reading, building immersive storyworlds and then inviting readers to analyze both themselves and their world.

With Critical Masses, Cordes Selbin offers a new perspective on contemporary “method wars,” recovering an early conception of criticism as dialectical practice. She also finds in Victorian ideals of civic engagement a precedent for current political anxieties about democratic decline.

Jesse Cordes Selbin is assistant professor of English at Gettysburg College.

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