Home
»
Number Sense of Nineteenth-Century British Literature
Number Sense of Nineteenth-Century British Literature
★★★★★
★★★★★
Regular price
€89.99
A01=Stefanie Markovits
Age Group_Uncategorized
Age Group_Uncategorized
Author_Stefanie Markovits
automatic-update
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=DSBF
Category=DSK
COP=United Kingdom
Delivery_Pre-order
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Language_English
PA=Not yet available
Price_€50 to €100
PS=Forthcoming
softlaunch
Product details
- ISBN 9780198937791
- Weight: 418g
- Dimensions: 145 x 223mm
- Publication Date: 06 Feb 2025
- Publisher: Oxford University Press
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
- Language: English
Delivery/Collection within 10-20 working days
Our Delivery Time Frames Explained
2-4 Working Days: Available in-stock
10-20 Working Days: On Backorder
Will Deliver When Available: On Pre-Order or Reprinting
We ship your order once all items have arrived at our warehouse and are processed. Need those 2-4 day shipping items sooner? Just place a separate order for them!
The Number Sense of Nineteenth-Century British Literature considers how the avalanche of printed numbers characterizing the period affected its literature. It looks at the influence of a variety of cultural and historical movements, such as the rise of statistics and of democratic Liberalism and concurrent developments in mathematics. This book takes as its starting point and focus the presence of actual numbers--ordinal and cardinal, Arabic, Roman, and spelled out in words--within the century's literary texts. It is through the deployment of such figures that texts display their number sense; similarly, readers develop the faculty of number sense by paying careful attention to their presence. And contemplation of a text's use of numbers, while frequently pointing to specific historical contexts, also enables more fundamental recognitions about how literature makes meaning.
The Number Sense asks what kinds of work, intellectual and ethical, literature's numerical figures perform. Why are some writers especially prone to include numbers? What affordances do they wield in various literary environments and against the backdrop of the numbery nineteenth century? When do textual numbers really count and when do they ask us to keep count? How do they stage contests between the one and the many, individuals and collectives? How do they relate to formal aspects of works, like plot and character, narrative, and lyric Lingering over literary measures illuminates the way numbers help shape texts into the recognizable forms we call genres. To that end, the book considers the works of poets, like Tennyson, Wordsworth, and Byron, and of novelists working in a broad range of genres, including Jane Austen, George Gissing, Charles Dickens, Anthony Trollope, Lewis Carroll, Bram Stoker, Wilkie Collins, and Thomas Hardy. The numbers embedded in their fictions and verse can serve both as valves, releasing cultural pressures, and as fulcrums, places where pressures coincide to create new forms of literary agency.
Stefanie Markovits is a Professor of English and the Director of Undergraduate Studies for English at Yale University. She studies and teaches British literature of the long nineteenth century: Romantic and Victorian, poetry and the novel. Professor Markovits is the author of three previous books: The Crisis of Action in Nineteenth-Century English Literature (Ohio State UP, 2006), The Crimean War in the British Imagination (Cambridge UP, 2009), and The Victorian Verse Novel: Aspiring to Life (Oxford UP, 2017).
Qty:
