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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Clare Walker GorePublisher: Edinburgh University Press Imprint: Edinburgh University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.386kg ISBN: 9781474455022ISBN 10: 1474455026 Pages: 208 Publication Date: 31 August 2021 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviews"This deeply satisfying, jargon-free book continually surprised me with its innovative interpretation of Victorian disability narratives. Walker Gore is equally brilliant at overviews and close readings of marginalised characters and disruptive plots.-- ""Valerie Sanders, University of Hull"" Walker Gore's book should be essential reading in the small but growing field that considers how disability is represented in the cultural texts of the nineteenth century, but also beyond. Walker Gore's desire to ""permanently chang[e] the academic conversation to include disability"" (13) is realized in this book insofar as its primary interventions are not directed solely or even primarily at those of us working on disability but rather at those interested in the relationship between form and character in nineteenth-century novels and who have yet to consider the role disabled characters play in that relationship. It is therefore this reader's hope that it will circulate widely--Natalie Prizel, Society of Fellows, Princeton University ""Nineteenth-Century Contexts"" Clare Walker Gore's adroitness in Plotting Disability in the Nineteenth-Century Novel comes not only from adeptly navigating the recovered cultural histories developed by scholars such as Karen Bourrier, Maria Frawley, and Martha Stoddard Holmes, among others, but also from building on their foundation to offer new analytic insights. ... In Walker Gore's avowedly formalist approach, literary analysis similarly becomes ""a political endeavour, an anti-eugenic gesture that claims space for a marginalised experience""--an effort to make room for occluded figures and understudied texts, but also, as evidenced by this excellent manuscript, for pursuing different reading practices.--Joel Simundich, Brown University ""Victorian Review"" Plotting Disability in the Nineteenth-Century Novel makes a valuable contribution to the fields of literary disability studies and Victorian studies in its exploration of disability as both a social identity and a form of fictional characterization. Gore's study impressively interweaves formal literary analysis with a theoretical methodology drawn from disability studies, as it investigates how embodiment determines the ways in which characters can influence plotlines across a range of novelistic genres.--Heather Tilley, Queen Mary University of London ""The Review of English Studies (August 2020)"" Plotting Disability offers us a reading method for novelistic representations of disability that embraces their strangeness, their marginality, their excesses. What emerges is a crip formalism that undoes the enduring ableism of how Victorian scholars have talked about the novel and about disability in the nineteenth century.--Travis Chi Wing Lau, Kenyon College ""Nineteenth-Century Gender Studies"" Building on a range of prior scholarship in original and thoughtful ways, and never shy of analytical complexity, Walker Gore's book is as generous as it is persuasive. She ends by meditating on how disabled Victorian characters--through their adaptation, continued popularity, and influence on literary successors--""have gone on working...well into our own time, and...still have something useful to offer us"" (235). The careful work apparent in every page of Plotting Disability likewise ensures that it will have ""something useful"" to offer scholars of the representation and reception of disability for many years to come.--Riley Brice McGuire, Worcester State University ""Disability Studies Quarterly"" Representing the next wave in literary and cultural studies of disability, Plotting Disability is a scholarly gem, offering gracefully written, nuanced analyses of key texts in the development of both the novel and the representation of disability.-- ""Martha Stoddard Holmes, California State University San Marcos""" Author InformationClare Walker Gore, Junior Research Fellow, Trinity College, Cambridge. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |