Gossip and Subversion in Nineteenth-Century British Fiction: Echo's Economies

J. Gordon

Gossip and Subversion in Nineteenth-Century British Fiction: Echo's Economies
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan
Country
United Kingdom
Published
27 November 1996
Pages
444
ISBN
9780333607824

Gossip and Subversion in Nineteenth-Century British Fiction: Echo’s Economies

J. Gordon

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Jan Gordon proposes that a reviled communicational ‘interest’ in gossip and its purveyors be given its proper due in the development of the novel in Britain. Commencing with Sir Walter Scott’s historically persecuted (but economically and politically necessary) androgynous voices in caves and concluding with Oscar Wilde’s premature celebration of gossip at the very moment it is transformed from public opinion to public judgment, the author finds gossip to be both deforming and shaping nineteenth century ‘letters’ in surprising ways. Like the ignominious orphan-figure of nineteenth-century fiction, gossip is the ‘unacknowledged reproduction’ searching for a political antecedence which might lend a legitimacy to its often discontinuous testimony, for a culture historically resistant to obtrusive voices.

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