Systems Failure: The Uses of Disorder in English Literature

Author:   Andrew Franta (Associate Professor of English, The University of Utah)
Publisher:   Johns Hopkins University Press
ISBN:  

9781421427515


Pages:   232
Publication Date:   11 June 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
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Systems Failure: The Uses of Disorder in English Literature


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Full Product Details

Author:   Andrew Franta (Associate Professor of English, The University of Utah)
Publisher:   Johns Hopkins University Press
Imprint:   Johns Hopkins University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.454kg
ISBN:  

9781421427515


ISBN 10:   1421427516
Pages:   232
Publication Date:   11 June 2019
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Introduction. Unconscionable Maps Chapter 1. Life without Theory in the Life of Savage Chapter 2. Sterne and the Uses of Disorder Chapter 3. From Map to Network in Humphry Clinker Chapter 4. Godwin's Handshake Chapter 5. Jane Austen and the Morphology of the Marriage Plot Chapter 6. De Quincey's Systems Coda. The Strange System of Human Society Notes Index

Reviews

Franta tells an accurate and important story about how impossibility, unintelligibility, unpredictability, and disorder inform both narrative and style in the latter half of the long eighteenth century... Each chapter of Systems Failure offers a worthy contribution to the criticism of its respective subject, and the book might be especially useful to students and scholars of the Romantic and Victorian eras seeking an entry point into the eighteenth century. --Alex Solomon, Rutgers University Review of English Studies


Franta tells an accurate and important story about how impossibility, unintelligibility, unpredictability, and disorder inform both narrative and style in the latter half of the long eighteenth century... Each chapter of Systems Failure offers a worthy contribution to the criticism of its respective subject, and the book might be especially useful to students and scholars of the Romantic and Victorian eras seeking an entry point into the eighteenth century. -- Alex Solomon, Rutgers University * Review of English Studies *


Franta tells an accurate and important story about how impossibility, unintelligibility, unpredictability, and disorder inform both narrative and style in the latter half of the long eighteenth century . . . Each chapter of Systems Failure offers a worthy contribution to the criticism of its respective subject, and the book might be especially useful to students and scholars of the Romantic and Victorian eras seeking an entry point into the eighteenth century. -Alex Solomon, Rutgers University, Review of English Studies This book is at once a counterhistory of the rise of the novel and a meditation on the social world as an elusive object of knowledge . . . While many others have emphasized the novel's commitment to representing the social world, this book demonstrates that such a commitment is compatible with a keen awareness of the inadequacy of the genre to that task . . . it is an admirable feature of Franta's argument that it often points past the edges of his archive toward a century-spanning, multidisciplinary history. -David Carroll Simon, University of Maryland, College Park, Critical Inquiry Andrew Franta's Systems Failure: The Uses of Disorder in English Literature challenges a familiar account of the Enlightenment that views it as an age of order premised upon an overriding confidence in systems and systematic thinking . . . In Franta's compelling study, the novel becomes a kind of laboratory, or staging ground, for Enlightenment theories that attempt to apply principles derived from the natural sciences to the social world. What the novels that feature in Systems Failure discover is that the terrain of fiction-social life-seems always to escape systematic attempts to explain it. Fiction, one might say, is not reducible to principle. -Anthony Jarrells, University of South Carolina, Wordsworth Circle By viewing characters as products of systems, Franta is able to show how the literature of this period contributed to the idea that society has a structure, paving the way for the development of disciplinary sociology in the nineteenth century. As its title suggests, Systems Failure is a work whose strength lies in its author's ability to handle polarizing abstractions with nuanced attention. -Allison Turner, Columbia University, Modern Philology An interesting, readable, and entertaining book, filled with excellent insights. Franta's prose is rich, and his argument is ingenious. -John O'Brien, University of Virginia, author of Literature Incorporated: The Cultural Unconscious of the Business Corporation, 1650-1850 This engaging, humane book proposes a new way of thinking about how and why the form of the novel emerged intertwined with Enlightenment systems-building. Franta argues that books by Johnson, Sterne, Smollett, Godwin, Austen, and De Quincey compassionately nudged readers towards 'a way of living with the inevitability of failure.' -Adela Pinch, University of Michigan, author of Thinking about Other People in Nineteenth-Century British Writing That the British novel did not 'rise' during the eighteenth century so much as flounder, that it was a detour in many cases from a social reality routed through individual experience, is just one of the bombshells in Andrew Franta's exciting new study. Systems Failure is particularly apt not just because structures, networks, and other configurations routinely take precedence over reference and character development, but because these same systems fail amid the gyrations of what turns out to have been a self-reflexive medium all along. Beginning with Johnson's Life of Savage and continuing in works by Smollett, Godwin, and especially Austen, Franta tracks a development where the representational assumptions surrounding these writers are challenged from within, yielding something at once familiar and indelibly strange. -William H. Galperin, Rutgers University, author of The History of Missed Opportunities: British Romanticism and the Emergence of the Everyday Systems Failure is a profoundly 'human,' humanist book, attentive to explorations of failure, the contours of complex events, and the inevitable mismatch of things to ideas. And it belongs therefore on the shelf of anyone interested in the recent return to the Enlightenment not as a moment of triumphant system-building, but as a moment of encounter with difference, complexity, and the limitations of human knowledge. -Sean Silver, Rutgers University, Eighteenth-Century Fiction


Author Information

Andrew Franta is an associate professor of English at the University of Utah. He is the author of Romanticism and the Rise of the Mass Public.

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