Victorian WillOhio University Press, 1989 - 493 pages John R. Reed, author of Victorian Conventions, The Natural History of H.G. Wells, and Decadent Style, has published a new critical study examining nineteenth-century British attitudes toward free will, determinism, providence, and fate. His new book, Victorian Will, argues for the need to understand a body of literature in its broadest historical and intellectual context. From among a number of different possibilities, Reed chose the concept of will -- whether understood as part of a providential scheme, as an illusory power in a determined existence, or as a free agent in a world of chance -- to illuminate the relationship of literary works of the period. Will was not only a prominent subject of discussion in Victorian England, but attitudes towards will affect form, style, and characterization in contemporary fiction, as Reed demonstrates in his discussion of the works of Mary Shelley, Bulwer-Lytton, Dickens, Thackeray, George Eliot, Thomas Hardy, and others. Victorian Will is destined to take its place beside Reed's other work as a standard reference in nineteenth-century study. |
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Page 162
... desire is inevitably desire for the end . Read in this manner , plot is a seductive force begetting desire in the 毋 reader , and the novelist therefore stands in relation to 162 EARLY NINETEENTH - CENTURY ENGLISH LITERATURE.
... desire is inevitably desire for the end . Read in this manner , plot is a seductive force begetting desire in the 毋 reader , and the novelist therefore stands in relation to 162 EARLY NINETEENTH - CENTURY ENGLISH LITERATURE.
Page 428
... desire , while asserting that will always begins with desire and then may become habitual . Where a person is not habituated to virtue , he must be made to desire virtue and hence establish a proper habit . " Will is the child of desire ...
... desire , while asserting that will always begins with desire and then may become habitual . Where a person is not habituated to virtue , he must be made to desire virtue and hence establish a proper habit . " Will is the child of desire ...
Page 475
... Desire : " The story is an allegory , illustrat- ing man's eternal search for ideal beauty , the world's desire , and the inevitable thwarting of success in search by his acceptance of counterfeit beauty " ( Old Gods Falling [ New York ...
... Desire : " The story is an allegory , illustrat- ing man's eternal search for ideal beauty , the world's desire , and the inevitable thwarting of success in search by his acceptance of counterfeit beauty " ( Old Gods Falling [ New York ...
Table des matières
Introduction to Part 1 | 5 |
The Self | 15 |
The Free Will Controversy | 29 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
accept achieve action argued asserted assumed becomes believed called cause central century chapter character Christian circumstance concept concerned consciousness create described desire destiny determinism Dickens direct discussion divine Eliot Essays evolution examine example existence explains expression faith fate feel fiction follow force freedom future George God's Hardy human idea imagination important impulse individual insanity interest issue John later less lives London man's material matter means Meredith mind moral narrative narrator nature necessity never nineteenth century novel offered pattern philosophical plot Poems position present progress providence reader reason religious represents responsibility Romantic says scheme seems sense shape Shelley social soul spirit story Subsequent references appear suggests theory things thought tion true truth University Press Victorian writers York