Telegraphic Realism: Victorian Fiction and Other Information SystemsStanford University Press, 2008 - 321 pages Menke's Telegraphic Realism is the first comprehensive reading of Victorian fiction as part of an emerging world of new media technologies and information exchange. The book analyzes the connections between fictional writing, communication technologies, and developing ideas about information, from the postage stamp and electric telegraph to wireless. By placing fiction in dialogue with media history, it argues that Victorian realism was print culture's sophisticated response to the possibilities and dilemmas of a world of media innovations and information flows. |
From inside the book
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Page 105
... Cities and " The Lifted Veil " suggest the power and the price of such informatic promises . Extending the real powers of the human sensorium , both texts imagine the possibility of objective access to real things unavailable to bodily ...
... Cities and " The Lifted Veil " suggest the power and the price of such informatic promises . Extending the real powers of the human sensorium , both texts imagine the possibility of objective access to real things unavailable to bodily ...
Page 107
... Cities is a historical novel for a new information epoch . From a focus on the former dependence of communication upon transport , aligned with the opacity of the embodied mind , the book moves to a Revolution impatient to breach the ...
... Cities is a historical novel for a new information epoch . From a focus on the former dependence of communication upon transport , aligned with the opacity of the embodied mind , the book moves to a Revolution impatient to breach the ...
Page 131
... Cities locates information precisely at the annihilation of the subject as either material body or fictional character . The final scene of his vision ... Cities . 61 A Tale of Two Cities begins by silently dragging Speaking Machines 131.
... Cities locates information precisely at the annihilation of the subject as either material body or fictional character . The final scene of his vision ... Cities . 61 A Tale of Two Cities begins by silently dragging Speaking Machines 131.
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Telegraphic Realism: Victorian Fiction and Other Information Systems Richard Menke Limited preview - 2008 |
Common terms and phrases
appears become begins body British Cage century chapter characters Charles Cities Clerks comes communication connection consciousness culture Dickens Dickens's discourse early Edited effects Electric Telegraph Eliot experience fact fiction figure final flow George helps Henry Hill human idea imagination invention James Jane John kind Kipling knowledge language later letters Lifted Veil lines literary literature London machine material means medium messages mind mode narrative narrator nature never nineteenth-century notes novel objects offer Oxford Penny perhaps photograph physical possibilities Post Office postal practice present Press provides railway reader realism reality receiver Reform relation Royal Mail scene seems sense social story suggests takes tale telegrams thing thoughts tion transmission treats Trollope turn understanding Univ Victorian vision Wireless wires writing York young