Abstract
Abstract
This article surveys Dickens scholarship in 2015, with attention to more than 170 monographs, collections, book chapters, and journal essays. The scholarship exhibits an increasing interest in intermediality studies (including intertextuality), “things” and “bodies,” ethical and moral analyses, and an intensifying revival of formal and textual-aesthetic interests, including treatments of style, mode, voice, characterization, form, and “beauty.” The scholarship surveyed is organized into the following categories: General Studies; Bibliographical Studies; Biographical Studies; Ethics; Aesthetics; Modes of Reading; Intermediality; Bodies; Childhood, Adulthood, Family; Environments; Empire; and Neo-Victorianism. It does not include web-based scholarship except for the cluster of articles published in the online journal 19: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century.
Publisher
The Pennsylvania State University Press
Reference185 articles.
1. Abraham, Adam. “Plagiarizing Pickwick: Imitations of Immortality.” Dickens Quarterly 32.1 (2015): 5–20.
2. Alexander, Christine. “Playful ‘Assumption’: Dickens's Early Performative Creativity and Its Influence on His Sons' Family Newspaper, the Gad's Hill Gazette.” Merchant and Waters. 183–206.
3. Allingham, Philip V. “Changes in Visual Interpretations of A Christmas Carol, 1843–1915: From Realization to Impression.” Dickens Studies Annual 46 (2015): 71–121.
4. Allingham, Philip V. “Seasonal Tales, Far-flung Settings: The Unfamiliar Landscapes of The Christmas Books and Stories (1843–1867).” Milli mâla—Journal of Language and Culture 7 (2015): 27–69.
5. Anderson, Benedict. Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origins and Spread of Nationalism. London: Verso, 1983.
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