"A brilliantly original consideration of the interrelationship between narratorial omniscience, objectivity, and detachment, and characterological knowledge, subjectivity, and sympathy. . . . Jaffe provides an important new way of thinking about point of view in Dickens, and in fiction more generally."--Robert L. Patten, author of "Charles Dickens and His Publishers" "Jaffe has opened up new critical terrain, both in Dickens studies and in narrative theory. In recognizing the self-conscious complexity of the omniscience ...
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"A brilliantly original consideration of the interrelationship between narratorial omniscience, objectivity, and detachment, and characterological knowledge, subjectivity, and sympathy. . . . Jaffe provides an important new way of thinking about point of view in Dickens, and in fiction more generally."--Robert L. Patten, author of "Charles Dickens and His Publishers" "Jaffe has opened up new critical terrain, both in Dickens studies and in narrative theory. In recognizing the self-conscious complexity of the omniscience problematic in Dickens's novels, she makes an important contribution to the contemporary debate about the construction of Victorian subjectivity."--John Kucich, author of "Repression in Victorian Fiction"
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Add this copy of Vanishing Points: Dickens, Narrative, and the Subject to cart. $95.83, good condition, Sold by Bonita rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Newport Coast, CA, UNITED STATES, published 1991 by University of California Press.