Victorian Reformations: Historical Fiction and Religious Controversy, 1820-1904

Author:   Miriam Elizabeth Burstein
Publisher:   University of Notre Dame Press
ISBN:  

9780268022389


Pages:   277
Publication Date:   30 December 2013
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Victorian Reformations: Historical Fiction and Religious Controversy, 1820-1904


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Author:   Miriam Elizabeth Burstein
Publisher:   University of Notre Dame Press
Imprint:   University of Notre Dame Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.461kg
ISBN:  

9780268022389


ISBN 10:   0268022380
Pages:   277
Publication Date:   30 December 2013
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

Burstein has written an engaging study of the varying ways in which the Victorians used the Protestant Reformation to pursue their religious controversies. Well-organized, well-supported by primary sources, and well-argued, it is a welcome addition to the scholarship on Victorian anti-Catholicism and religious controversy. --The Catholic Historical Review, Volume 101, No. 3, Summer 2015


""Victorian Reformations sheds fresh light on the significance of religion in historical nineteenth-century fiction. The argument is subtle but strong, buttressed by meticulous scholarship and conveyed in vigorous prose which keeps the reader focused and stimulated throughout. This readable and independent-minded study will be a boon to research on the nineteenth century, not only in the field of literature but also in those of history and religious studies."" —Marianne Thormählen, Lund University ""Burstein's elegantly written study is the first work by a literary historian to focus on 'controversial historical novels,' that is, on novels that intervene in this public discourse by presenting fictionalized histories of the Reformation."" —Horizons “This thorough and absorbing book studies the Protestant Reformation as it is represented and continually rewritten in 19th-century and Victorian fiction. Burstein’s research and readings are truly enlightening regarding the clashes of Victorian Protestantism with the challenge of Catholicism and the fictional reimaginings of the Reformation played in the 19th-century religious and cultural war of ideas. . . . Her prose throughout is engaging, precise, and eloquent, and her compact summary conclusions at the ends of chapters are helpful.” —Choice “On the whole, while introducing the almost innumerable Victorian novels devoted to the Tudor Reformation from so many varying viewpoints, the author maintains a seeming impartiality.” —The Heythrop Journal ""Miriam Elizabeth Burstein’s Victorian Reformations is that rare and splendid thing: a book in the fields of British studies and Victorian studies that is a genuinely valuable contribution for both literary scholars and historians . . . . This cleverly and fruitfully arranged discussion, which blends together canonical and noncanonical authors, deserves to become a model for aspiring literary scholars. Burstein is a professor of English, and historians will be particularly grateful for her thorough and careful attention to secondary sources in their discipline.” —Journal of British Studies “Burstein has written an engaging study of the varying ways in which the Victorians used the Protestant Reformation to pursue their religious controversies. Well-organized, well-supported by primary sources, and well-argued, it is a welcome addition to the scholarship on Victorian anti-Catholicism and religious controversy.” —The Catholic Historical Review “Burstein does an admirable job of illuminating the sort of doctrinal debate—in this case, a debate over the meaning of the Protestant Reformation for British identity—that often goes unnoticed in the standard accounts of the great authors, who seem magically to transcend such concerns. . . What emerges is an intellectual history of the era demonstrating that deeply ingrained religious sentiments can still be found beneath the surface of our loftier and more cosmopolitan pretenses.” —Victorian Studies “Victorian Reformations is most valuable as a contribution to the history of Victorian evangelism, Catholicism, and anti-Catholicism. For the literary historian and critic who doesn’t have these specialized concerns, its greatest interest probably lies in what it demonstrates about the influence of Sir Walter Scott, and the ways in which religious novelists worked in a tradition deriving from him but differing significantly from the much better-known secular tradition defined by Georg Lukács in The Historical Novel.” —Modern Philology “Burstein employs a close . . . reading of forgotten, controversial, historical novels to investigate how Victorians portrayed the Reformation and used it to make sense of their own time. In all, [her] examination of religious memory deserves wide readership.” —Anglican and Episcopal History “[Burstein’s] study is of great significance, not only to literary scholars (as it presents new ways of reading popular fiction and contextualizes the “great works” of the period) but perhaps even more to cultural historians and Church historians. For us, it sheds light on the character of the religious dissent in Victorian Britain.” —The English Historical Review


Victorian Reformations is most valuable as a contribution to the history of Victorian evangelism, Catholicism, and anti-Catholicism. For the literary historian and critic who doesn't have these specialized concerns, its greatest interest probably lies in what it demonstrates about the influence of Sir Walter Scott, and the ways in which religious novelists worked in a tradition deriving from him but differing significantly from the much better-known secular tradition defined by Georg Lukacs in The Historical Novel. --Modern Philology <p/> Burstein employs a close . . . reading of forgotten, controversial, historical novels to investigate how Victorians portrayed the Reformation and used it to make sense of their own time. In all, [her] examination of religious memory deserves wide readership. --Anglican and Episcopal History


Author Information

Miriam Elizabeth Burstein is associate professor of English at the College at Brockport, State University of New York. She is the author of Narrating Women's History in Britain, 1770–1902.

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