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Dickens, Novel Reading, and the Victorian Popular Theatre Deborah Vlock

Dickens, Novel Reading, and the Victorian Popular Theatre By Deborah Vlock

Dickens, Novel Reading, and the Victorian Popular Theatre by Deborah Vlock


Summary

This 1998 study shows that many of Dickens' characters and plots can be traced to the Victorian stage. Exploring accounts of actors, actresses, and popular onstage characters, Deborah Vlock uncovers unexpected sources for some Dickensian characters, and throws new light on the conditions in which Dickens' novels were initially received.

Dickens, Novel Reading, and the Victorian Popular Theatre Summary

Dickens, Novel Reading, and the Victorian Popular Theatre by Deborah Vlock

Dickens' novels, like those of his contemporaries, are more explicitly indebted to the theatre than scholars have supposed: his stories and characters were often already public property by the time they were published, circulating as part of a current theatrical repertoire well known to many Victorian readers. In this 1998 study, Deborah Vlock argues that novels - and novel-readers - were in effect created by the popular theatre in the nineteenth century, and that the possibility of reading and writing narrative was conditioned by the culture of the stage. Vlock resuscitates the long-dead voices of Dickens' theatrical sources, which now only tentatively inhabit reviews, scripts, fiction and non-fiction narratives, but which were everywhere in Dickens' time: voices of noted actors and actresses and of popular theatrical characters. She uncovers unexpected precursors for some popular Dickensian characters, and reconstructs the conditions in which Dickens' novels were initially received.

Dickens, Novel Reading, and the Victorian Popular Theatre Reviews

[Vlock] has shown why explanations of the cultural context of novel-reading that emphasize privacy and domesticity are unsatisfactory. She has pointed to a more promising direction for research. D.G. Paz, Albion

Table of Contents

List of illustrations; Acknowledgments; 1. Introduction; 2. Dickens and the 'imaginary text'; 3. Theatrical attitudes: performance and the English imagination; 4. Patter and the politics of standard speech in Victorian England; 5. Charles Mathews, Charles Dickens, and the comic female voice; 6. Patter and the problem of redundancy: odd women and Little Dorrit; 7. Conclusion; Notes; Bibliography; Index.

Additional information

NLS9780521026888
9780521026888
0521026881
Dickens, Novel Reading, and the Victorian Popular Theatre by Deborah Vlock
New
Paperback
Cambridge University Press
2006-11-02
244
N/A
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