Victorian Subjects

Front Cover
Duke University Press, 1991 - 330 pages
Written over a thirty-five year period, these essays reflect the changes in J. Hillis Miller's thinking on Victorian topics, from an early concern with questions of consciousness, form, and intellectual history, to a more recent focus on parable and the development of a deconstructive ethics of reading.
Miller defines the term "Victorian subjects" in more than one sense. The phrase identifies an historical time but also names a concern throughout with subjectivity, consciousness, and selfhood in Victorian literature. The essays show various Victorian subjectivities seeking to ground themselves in their own underlying substance or in some self beneath or beyond the self. But "Victorian subjects" also discusses those who were subject to Queen Victoria, to the reigning ideologies of the time, to historical, social, and material conditions, including the conditions under which literature was written, published, distributed, and consumed.
These essays, taken together, sketch the outlines of ideological assumptions within the period about the self, interpersonal relations, nature, literary form, the social function of literature, and other Victorian subjects.
 

Contents

Money in Our Mutual Friend
5
Some implications of form in Victorian fiction
79
firstperson
91
Interpretation in Dickens Bleak House
179
Nature and the linguistic moment
207
BĂ©guin Balzac Trollope and the double
213
Middlemarch chapter 85
233
Anthony Trollopes Cousin Henry
257
The values of obduracy in Trollopes Lady Anna
263
Trollopes Thackeray
271
Theology and logology in Victorian literature
279
George Eliots bestiary
289
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