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Tuberculosis and the Victorian Literary Imagination: 74 (Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture, Series Number 74)
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Illustrated, 11/25/2010
EAN 9780521766678, ISBN10: 0521766672
Hardcover, 242 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.4 cm
Language: English
Tuberculosis was a widespread and deadly disease which devastated the British population in the nineteenth century: consequently it also had a huge impact upon public consciousness. This text explores the representations of tuberculosis in nineteenth-century literature and culture. Fears about gender roles, degeneration, national efficiency and sexual transgression all play their part in the portrayal of 'consumption', a disease which encompassed a variety of cultural associations. Through an examination of a range of Victorian texts, from well-known and popular novels by Charles Dickens and Elizabeth Gaskell to critically neglected works by Mrs Humphry Ward and Charles Reade, this work reveals the metaphors of illness which surrounded tuberculosis and the ways those metaphors were used in the fiction of the day. The book also contains detailed analysis of the substantial body of writing by nineteenth-century physicians which exists about this disease, and examines the complex relationship between medical 'fact' and literary fiction.
Introduction
1. Nineteenth-century medical discourse on pulmonary phthisis
2. Consuming the family economy
disease and capitalism in Charles Dickens's Dombey and Son and Elizabeth Gaskell's North and South
3. The consumptive diathesis and the Victorian invalid in Mrs Humphry Ward's Eleanor
4. 'There is beauty in woman's decay'
the rise of the tubercular aesthetic
5. Consumption and the Count
the pathological origins of Vampirism and Bram Stoker's Dracula
6. 'A kind of intellectual advantage'
phthisis and masculine identity in Henry James's The Portrait of a Lady
Conclusion
Appendix A. Phthisis mortality
Appendix B. Medical publications on consumption
Appendix C. Gender distribution of phthisis.