by Rosemarie Bodenheimer (Author), Philip Davis (Author)
Written in the form of a back-and-forth dialogue between the two authors, this book is about the relationship between feeling and thinking in Dickens's novels. It presents Dickens as a psychological thinker, whose generative thought may be conscious, unconscious, half-conscious, or in transit between one state and another. This Dickens is always in live process, improvizing from one monthly number to the next, subtly revizing as he goes, shifting moods, tenses, and tones from one paragraph or sentence to the next, as what he writes sparks off what he suddenly, newly, thinks.
The chapters approach this inquiry through close readings of chosen passages, including studies of telling revisions in Dickens's manuscripts that reveal the power of his deepened second thoughts. They also draw on selected moments from his personal letters and prefaces when these more casual writings prove to be sketches or rehearsals for thoughts and feelings that achieve new life when they are transformed into fiction. The book concentrates on four novels of his great middle period:
Dombey and Son, David Copperfield, Bleak House, and
Little Dorrit, while making excursions into earlier and later Dickens novels, notably
A Tale of Two Cities and
Our Mutual Friend. The experiment of intense but informal conversation between the authors also models the relationship between feeling and thinking in the act of reading and responding to powerful moves in fiction.
Author Biography
Rosemarie Bodenheimer, Professor Emerita of English, Boston College, Philip Davis, Emeritus Professor of Literature and Psychology, University of Liverpool
Rosemarie Bodenheimer has been trying to get her head around Dickens since her undergraduate days. She spent her working life as Professor of English at Boston College, specializing in Victorian and modern fiction. In
The Real Life of Mary Ann Evans: George Eliot, Her Letters and Fiction (1994) and
Knowing Dickens (2007), she fashioned a form of biographical criticism that juxtaposes a writer's letters with published works, as mutually illuminating forms of writing. After retirement, she published in various areas, most recently
Samuel Beckett in the OUP series
My Reading (2022).
Philip Davis was, until his retirement, Director of the Centre for Research into Reading, Literature and Society (CRILS) at the University of Liverpool, with strong interests in reading and inner being, with particular relation to emotion, memory, auto/biography, and fictional realism. His work on Victorian writing includes
Memory and Writing, The Victorians volume in the
Oxford English Literary History series,
Why Victorian Literature Still Matters, and
The Transferred Life of George Eliot. He is an editor of two OUP series:
The Literary Agenda and
My Reading.
Number of Pages: 224
Dimensions: 0.9 x 9 x 6 IN
Publication Date: May 29, 2024