Jane Carlyle: Newly Selected Letters

Author:   Kenneth J. Fielding ,  David R. Sorensen
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780367888213


Pages:   384
Publication Date:   12 December 2019
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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.

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Jane Carlyle: Newly Selected Letters


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Full Product Details

Author:   Kenneth J. Fielding ,  David R. Sorensen
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.453kg
ISBN:  

9780367888213


ISBN 10:   0367888211
Pages:   384
Publication Date:   12 December 2019
Audience:   College/higher education ,  General/trade ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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 Contents

Contents: Editors' introduction: selecting Jane Carlyle's letters; Bibliography; Chronology; Editorial note; In search of genius, 1819-26; In these moors, 1828-34; This stirring life ” and a parting, 1834-42; Turned adrift in the world, 1842-45; Finding a mission, 1845-47; Looking out into the vague, 1847-49; Unease in Zion, 1850-56; Two interludes; Past mending, 1857-60; Spiritual magnetism, 1861-63; Like a dim nightmare, 1863-64; The perfectly extraordinary woman, 1865-66; Indexes.

Reviews

'The kind of pleasure one takes in reading Jane Carlyle's letters is akin to that felt on reading a good novel.' Times Literary Supplement 'Jane Carlyle is unsurpassed among women letter-writers for wit and graphic power. ... Jane found relief from her frustration in curiosity, sharp humor and an effortless command of words. She knew some of the most interesting people of her time, too. She conjures up scenes and incidents with a vividness that makes you wonder why she didn't become one of the great Victorian novelists.' John Gross, The Wall Street Journal 'Everyone knows the story of J. S. Mill's maid accidentally burning part of Carlyle's manuscript of The French Revolution. But Jane made her own less celebrated fire deliberately, after she caught George Craik reading her journal and decided that it was too dangerously intimate to exist. Reading these marvellous letters, with their vividness and wit, one can only mourn the loss. ' The Spectator '... a valuable addition to our understanding of a brilliant and fascinating woman.' The Herald 'The introduction and notation are excellent and the selection probably gives us as accurate a portrayal of Jane Carlyle (and her world) as is possible.' Contemporary Review 'This is part of a handsome series The Nineteenth Century edited from the University of Leicester, and it affords an opportunity for book-length assessments of topics [...] and individuals... Professor Fielding and Sorensen have produced in this substantial anthology a richly detailed and authoritatively edited view which reinforces what we knew [...] and opens out much that we did not, for the reason that much of what they now present is only recently discovered, and a great amount published for the first time... the letters selected here flesh out a wholly new Jane, and the newly-discovered material by her, and about her, give her a presence never before felt, an insight into her attitude to her husband, her society, into her religious beliefs a


'The kind of pleasure one takes in reading Jane Carlyle's letters is akin to that felt on reading a good novel.' Times Literary Supplement 'Jane Carlyle is unsurpassed among women letter-writers for wit and graphic power. ... Jane found relief from her frustration in curiosity, sharp humor and an effortless command of words. She knew some of the most interesting people of her time, too. She conjures up scenes and incidents with a vividness that makes you wonder why she didn't become one of the great Victorian novelists.' John Gross, The Wall Street Journal 'Everyone knows the story of J. S. Mill’s maid accidentally burning part of Carlyle’s manuscript of The French Revolution. But Jane made her own less celebrated fire deliberately, after she caught George Craik reading her journal and decided that it was too dangerously intimate to exist. Reading these marvellous letters, with their vividness and wit, one can only mourn the loss. ' The Spectator '... a valuable addition to our understanding of a brilliant and fascinating woman.' The Herald 'The introduction and notation are excellent and the selection probably gives us as accurate a portrayal of Jane Carlyle (and her world) as is possible.' Contemporary Review 'This is part of a handsome series The Nineteenth Century edited from the University of Leicester, and it affords an opportunity for book-length assessments of topics [...] and individuals... Professor Fielding and Sorensen have produced in this substantial anthology a richly detailed and authoritatively edited view which reinforces what we knew [...] and opens out much that we did not, for the reason that much of what they now present is only recently discovered, and a great amount published for the first time... the letters selected here flesh out a wholly new Jane, and the newly-discovered material by her, and about her, give her a presence never before felt, an insight into her attitude to her husband, her society, into her religious beliefs a


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Kenneth J. Fielding and David R. Sorensen

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