Character, Writing, and Reputation in Victorian Law and Literature
Book Details
AI Summary
Delivery Location
Delivery fee: Select location
Delivery in 14 days
Why would Hawthorne and Eliot grant their fallen women an anachronistic right to silence that could only worsen their punishment? Why did Bronte and Gaskell find gossip such a useful source of information when lawyers excluded it as hearsay? How did Trollopes work as an editor influence his preoccupation throughout his novels with libel? Drawing on a range of primary sources including novels, Victorian periodical literature, legislative debate, case law, and legal treatise, Cathrine O. Frank traces the ways conventions of literary characterisation mingled with character-centred legal developments to produce a jurisprudential theory of character that extends beyond the legal profession. She explores how key categories and representational strategies for imagining individual personhood also defined communities and mediated relations within them, in life and in fiction.
Get Character, Writing, and Reputation in Victorian Law and Literature by at the best price and quality guaranteed only at Werezi Africa's largest book ecommerce store. The book was published by Edinburgh University Press and it has pages.
Discover books you might love based on this title.
More in This Genre
Climate Change and the Contemporary Novel
Ksh 17,800.00
Das Staatsrecht in Der Rechtslehre Kants
Ksh 6,400.00
Q&A Jurisprudence
Ksh 36,000.00
Western Winds
Ksh 3,600.00
Transnational Crusoe, Illustration and Reading History, 1719–1722
Ksh 2,550.00
Horror und Greuel in der franzoesischen Prosa des 19. Jahrhunderts
Ksh 7,750.00