Reclamations
Essays on Neglected Novels and Endangered Ideas
Reclamations
Essays on Neglected Novels and Endangered Ideas
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Description
These provocative essays offer a bold vision of the benefits of reading that challenges contemporary trends, reintroducing neglected works of fiction and memoir.
For readers curious to learn about both novels that have been neglected and ideas that are becoming endangered – because they challenge contemporary tastes and values – Reclamations provides fresh readings of a curated selection of books from the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries. Reading a wide range of authors, such as Jane Austen, Oscar Wilde, D. H. Lawrence, James Baldwin, Philip Roth, Kamala Shamsie, and Celeste Ng, Julia Prewitt Brown brings together her years of teaching experience and razor-sharp commentary to open up new ways of looking at the past and present, interrogating how people today see the world and literature's place in it.
Rather than a chronological progression, these nine essays aim to guide readers through a series of questions concerning contemporary tastes, morality, character building, and philosophical thought in literature. What is it about Lawrence that scares people? What did the Victorians understand about the effects of wealth on character that we've forgotten? Is the idea of agency replacing the idea of character in today's popular fiction? Can a novelist light a reader's path with unanswerable questions?
The neglected novels and ideas highlighted in Reclamations deserve attention today not only because of their distinctiveness, but also because the fact of their neglect helps us understand the cultural present.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Part I. Contemporary Taste in Fiction
1. The Taboo on D.H. Lawrence
What is it about Lawrence that scares people?
2. Philip Roth's When She Was Good
How low must she go before her self-righteousness destroys her?
3. The Contemporary Scene in Fiction
Is the idea of agency replacing the idea of character in today's popular fiction?
Part II. Character in Its Moral Context
4. “How Pleasant It Is to Have Money, Heigh Ho!”
What did the Victorians understand about the effects of wealth on character – that we've forgotten?
5. The Singular Happiness of the Artist
Are these writers being held hostage to the myth of the suffering artist?
6. Trollope Today
Why Trollope? And why now?
Part III. Creedless Religion and Unbridled Philosophical Speculation
7. Self-help Literature and the Vanishing Legacy of Thomas Carlyle
How did a nineteenth-century philosopher become his own therapist?
8. “My Life, My Real Life”
Why is the late memoir of a famous writer being neglectged?
9. Keith Waldrop's Light While There Is Light
Can a novelist light the reader's path with unanswerable questions?
Notes
Index
Product details
| Published | 09 Jul 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Hardback |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 176 |
| ISBN | 9798216367222 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Dimensions | 216 x 140 mm |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
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