Language, Science and Popular Fiction in the Victorian Fin-de-Siècle: The Brutal Tongue

Language, Science and Popular Fiction in the Victorian Fin-de-Siècle: The Brutal Tongue

by Christine Ferguson
Language, Science and Popular Fiction in the Victorian Fin-de-Siècle: The Brutal Tongue

Language, Science and Popular Fiction in the Victorian Fin-de-Siècle: The Brutal Tongue

by Christine Ferguson

Paperback

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Overview

Christine Ferguson's timely study is the first comprehensive examination of the importance of language in forming a crucial nexus among popular fiction, biology, and philology at the Victorian fin-de-siècle. Focusing on a variety of literary and non-literary texts, the book maps out the dialogue between the Victorian life and social sciences most involved in the study of language and the literary genre frequently indicted for causing linguistic corruption and debasement - popular fiction. Ferguson demonstrates how Darwinian biological, philological, and anthropological accounts of 'primitive' and animal language were co-opted into wider cultural debates about the apparent brutality of popular fiction, and shows how popular novelists such as Marie Corelli, Grant Allen, H.G. Wells, H. Rider Haggard, and Bram Stoker used their fantastic narratives to radically reformulate the relationships among language, thought, and progress that underwrote much of the contemporary prejudice against mass literary taste. In its alignment of scientific, cultural, and popular discourses of human language, Language, Science, and Popular Fiction in the Victorian Fin-de-Siècle stands as a corrective to assessments of best-selling fiction's intellectual, ideological, and aesthetic simplicity.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781138262805
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 10/19/2016
Series: The Nineteenth Century Series
Pages: 190
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.19(h) x (d)

About the Author

Christine Ferguson is Lecturer in English at the University of Glasgow, Scotland.

Table of Contents

Contents: Introduction; What does brutal language mean?; The voice of the people: Marie Corelli, the romance, and the language of the masses; Savage articulations in the romances of Grant Allen; The law and the larynx: R.L. Garner, H.G. Wells, and dehumanization of language; Standard English at stake in Stoker's Dracula; Epilogue; Bibliography; Index.
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