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OverviewIn Changing Hands, Peter J. Capuano sifts through Victorian literature and culture for changes in the way the human body is imagined in the face of urgent questions about creation, labor, gender, class, and racial categorization, using “hands” (the “distinguishing mark of . . . humanity”) as the primary point of reference. Capuano complicates his study by situating the historical argument in the context of questions about the disappearance of hands during the twentieth century into the haze of figurative meaning. Out of this curious aporia, Capuano exposes a powerful, “embodied handedness” as the historical basis for many of the uncritically metaphoric, metonymic, and/or ideogrammatic approaches to the study of the human body in recent critical discourse. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Peter CapuanoPublisher: The University of Michigan Press Imprint: The University of Michigan Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.521kg ISBN: 9780472052844ISBN 10: 0472052845 Pages: 340 Publication Date: 01 June 2015 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsThis book will change the way we read the bodies of Victorian characters;Capuano alerts us to the importance of a signifier so ubiquitous in the literature as to have become invisible. No longer! Changing Hands is a well-written, highly readable volume offering a significant scholarly payload. Scholars will be citing and extending this work for some time to come. Pamela Gilbert, University of Florida Changing Hands offers a revelatory account of the impact of industrialism and evolutionary discourse on conceptions of human agency and identity, which Peter Capuano brilliantly elicits from figurations of the human hand. In capturing the pervasive importance of a trope long hidden in plain sight, Capuano transfigures a broad range of nineteenth-century reflection. --James Eli Adams, Columbia University This book will change the way we read the bodies of Victorian characters; Capuano alerts us to the importance of a signifier so ubiquitous in the literature as to have become invisible. No longer! Changing Hands is a well-written, highly readable volume offering a significant scholarly payload. Scholars will be citing and extending this work for some time to come. --Pamela Gilbert, University of Florida Changing Hands is a major contribution to Victorian studies, revealing the human hand as a fascinating nexus for the scientific, industrial, religious, and social upheavals of the age. Capuano's provocative examples and arguments freshly illuminate the whole landscape of nineteenth-century writing: this is a manual for our critical moment. --Andrew Stauffer, University of Virginia This book will change the way we read the bodies of Victorian characters;Capuano alerts us to the importance of a signifier so ubiquitous in the literature as to have become invisible. No longer!<i>Changing Hands</i>is a well-written, highly readable volume offering a significant scholarly payload. Scholars will be citing and extending this work for some time to come. Pamela Gilbert, University of Florida Author InformationPeter J. Capuano is Associate Professor of English and Director of the Nineteenth-Century Studies Program at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and a faculty member of the University of California's Dickens Project. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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