Posts Tagged Dickens

Dickens’s World – Special Issue 2

Wiley-Blackwell is delighted to release the following special issue as part of the ‘Dickens’s World’ Online Conference – read the articles below for FREE!

Victorian Psychology and the Novel
Anne Stiles
Originally published in Literature Compass Read the rest of this entry »

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Conference Paper: Victorian Print Culture, Journalism and the Novel

Matthew Rubery
(Queen Mary, University of Londonr)

To read this article and the commissioned commentaries for free just Read the rest of this entry »

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Conference Paper: The Manly Mind? Revisiting the Victorian ‘Sex in Brain’ Debate

Rob Boddice
(Humboldt University, Berlin)

To read this article and the commissioned commentaries for free just Read the rest of this entry »

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Keynote Lecture: Psychology, Gender, and the Brain in Dickens Scholarship – Prof. Anne Stiles

Literature Compass editor and author, Anne Stiles (St. Louis University) shares her thoughts on scholarship regarding Dickens, psychology, gender and the brain.

Papers discussed are:

The Manly Mind? Revisiting the Victorian ‘Sex in Brain’ Debate by Rob Boddice
Victorian Sexualities by Holly Furneaux
Unsettling the Normative: Articulations of Masculinity in Victorian Literature and Culture by Dustin Friedman
Dickens and Women by Kathryn Sutherland
In Such a State of Ink: Adolescents in the Novels of Charles Dickens by Elizabeth Welburn
Victorian Psychology and the Novel by Anne Stiles
David Copperfield as Psychological Fiction by Mark Spilka

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Conference Paper: Global Dickens

John O. Jordan
(University of California, Santa Cruz)

To read this article and the commissioned commentaries for free just Read the rest of this entry »

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Dickens’s World – Special Issue 1

Wiley-Blackwell is delighted to release the following special issue as part of the ‘Dickens’s World’ Online Conference – read the articles below for FREE!

PUTTING THE WORLD INTO A BOX: A GEOGRAPHY OF NINETEENTH-CENTURY ‘TRAVELLING LANDSCAPES’
Veronica Della Dora
Originally published in Geografiska Annaler Read the rest of this entry »

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Conference Paper: Testing a Civilisation: Charles Dickens on the American Penitentiary System

David Wilson
(Centre for Criminal Justice Policy and Research, Birmingham City University)

To read this article and the commissioned commentaries for free just Read the rest of this entry »

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Conference Paper: Dickens on the Chinese Screen

Ting Guo
(University of Exeter)

To read this article and the commissioned commentaries for free just Read the rest of this entry »

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Keynote Lecture: Dickens’s World: Beginning the World – Prof John Bowen

Professor John Bowen (York) discusses Dickens, travel and the history of the novel in his introductory talk to the conference.

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Introduction – Prof. Regenia Gagnier

I’m Regenia Gagnier, Professor of English at the University of Exeter and Editor in Chief of  Literature Compass and the Global Circulation Project (GCP).  The GCP traces the circulation of authors, books, literary movements and genres around the world, specializing in moments of cultural translation. For the month of February I have been participating in the launch of the Bicentenary of the birth of Charles Dickens, what we call Dickens 2012. Literature Compass and the GCP have joined the British Council,  Dickens House Museum, and Dickens Fellowship in events held at the Museum of London, Westminster Abbey, and Buckingham Palace in celebration  of the novelist and his works.

Dickens has historically been the most popular British creative writer after Shakespeare, both a national and international figure. Writers from Dostoevsky, Galdós, Joyce, Kafka, Faulkner, Nabokov, and Beckett to Kumar, Naipaul, Ngugi, Soyinka, Dabydeen, Carey, and Rushdie have written of the impact of Dickens on their own creative practice. Abroad, Dickens has represented the “English Book,” the panoramic style, depictions of the masses, of the urban and London, of the suffering of children. He has inspired critics of poverty and injustice; and film auteurs from Eisenstein, Griffith, and Chaplin to Lean, Polanski, Greene and Burstall have adapted his novels according to their own cultural moments and locations. Dickens was translated into Russian as early as the 1830s and was the most read British author in China from his first translation in the 1890s to the Cultural Revolution, studied and discussed  by the Late Qing, Nationalists, and Communists alike. (The first complete edition of Dickens’s novels in Chinese will be out in time for the London Book Fair this spring, which will focus on the PRC.)  In 1911 the Melbourne Branch of the Dickens Fellowship debated whether he was an important influence on Australian democracy. In Latin America, a literature on the street children grew up after Dickens in Argentina and Brazil. In the 1970s students in the townships in South Africa read and performed Dickens and demanded more.

Dickens by Stephanie Tanzil. Image used with permission.

We have celebrated Dickens 2012 with a Tale of Four Cities travelling conference between Paris, Boulogne and Condette, Chatham and Rochester, and London, all cities significant in the life of Dickens. In London, the theme at the Museum of London  was “Global Dickens.” The British Council sent out invitations to a Global Readathon: 24 hours reading from 24 Dickens’s works in 24 different countries.  66 countries responded, with 3 million hits from China alone.  The British Council also asked schools world-wide to consider “What would Dickens write today?,” and “Where would he be writing from?” They received the most wonderful short works from pupils and students throughout the world.

If you want to read more work on Global Dickens, look at the GCP and at many more articles just on Dickens at Literature Compass.

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