Serious Play: The Cultural Form of the Nineteenth-Century Realist Novel

Serious Play: The Cultural Form of the Nineteenth-Century Realist Novel

by J. Jeffrey Franklin
Serious Play: The Cultural Form of the Nineteenth-Century Realist Novel

Serious Play: The Cultural Form of the Nineteenth-Century Realist Novel

by J. Jeffrey Franklin

Hardcover(Reprint 2016)

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Overview

Queen Victoria was famously not amused, and the age to which she gave her name is not generally known for its playfulness or sense of fun. But play was pervasive in Victorian society and in the realist novels that were central to that culture. In Serious Play, J. Jeffrey Franklin examines the role of play in three areas—gambling, theatricality, and aesthetic theory—demonstrating in the process how the realist novel served as a vehicle for play while play in turn entered and helped define the form of realism.

Franklin's analysis focuses on close readings of eight novels by Charlotte Bronte, George Eliot, Charles Kingsley, William Thackeray, and Anthony Trollope, as well as works by Immanuel Kant, Adam Smith, John Ruskin, and Matthew Arnold. The readings are grounded in histories and cultural studies of gambling, recreation, the stock market, theater and antitheatrical prejudice, the performance of gender roles, working-class protest, aesthetic theory, and especially the novel genre itself. While the treatments of gambling, theatricality, and aesthetics are specific, the book shows how play links each of them to broader, culturally defining issues that Victorian writings frequently express: values versus value, the artificial versus the authentic, and the real versus the illusory.

Serious Play demonstrates, as no previous study has, how play functioned as a linchpin concept within the discursive infrastructure of Victorian society, challenging critical commonplaces about the unplayfulness of the Victorians and the ideological conservatism of realism.

"Serious Play provides a completely new insight into the Victorian realist novel. . . . All the major theories of play are subjected to penetrating analysis through which their respective shortcomings and their historical conditioning are highlighted, so that the book can also be read as one of the most comprehensive assessments of modern play theories to date." —Wolfgang Iser


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780812234848
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Publication date: 06/09/1999
Series: Anniversary Collection
Edition description: Reprint 2016
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

J. Jeffrey Franklin Is Professor of English and Associate Vice Chancellor for Undergraduate Experiences at the University of Colorado, Denver.

Table of Contents

1. Nineteenth-Century Discourses of Play and the Novel as a Cultural Form
—Victorian Play/Postmodern Play
—The Realist Novel as Play Space
2. Gambling with Fortuna
—Gaming/Gambling
—Choice, Circumstance, Chance
—Extraliterary Antigambling Discourse
—Finance, Panic, and Mode of Exchange
—Good Moneyand the Matrimonial Gamble
—Dead Hand, Live Hand, Invisible Hand
—Bad Money and Class Mobility
—Work/Business
—The Last Hand
3. Performing the Self
—Just Act Natural
—Victorian Antitheatrical Rhetoric and the Novelization of the Theatrical
—The Novel Versus Melodrama
—Theatricalization of the Social/Socialization of the Theatrical
—The Theatrical Subversion of Gender Roles
—Antitheatrical Discourse/Theatrical Form
—Sympathy/Theatricality
—Reader Identification and Audience Form
—Finale
4. Theorizing the Aesthetic Citizen
—Aesthetic Play
—Kantian Play
—The Romantic Replacement of Play
—The Labor of Art/The Art of Labor
—The Victorian Revival of Kant as Culture
—Learning to Play by the Rules in Pendennis
—Alton Locke's Colonization of Play
—The Novelization of the Aesthetic
—The Recuperation of Aesthetics and the Art of Subversion

Notes
Works Cited
Acknowledgments
Index

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