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dc.contributor.authorBuzard, James
dc.date.accessioned2012-04-05T19:05:44Z
dc.date.available2012-04-05T19:05:44Z
dc.date.issued2010-01
dc.identifier.issn1060-1503
dc.identifier.issn1470-1553
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/69962
dc.description.abstractThis short paper proposes to consider the transition from Bleak House (1852–53) to Little Dorrit (1856–57) as a phase of particular significance in Dickens's debate with himself over the claims, benefits, and pitfalls of national and wider forms of belonging. I elide Hard Times (1854) because it seems to me that with the composition of Bleak House Dickens had definitively arrived at the conviction that the twenty-number monthly novel was that one of his novelistic forms best suited to sustained exploration and testing of capacious social networks making claims upon individuals' identification and loyalty. In Bleak House – as I have argued in Disorienting Fiction: The Autoethnographic Work of Nineteenth-Century British Novels (2005) – Dickens responds to the false universalism of the Great Exhibition of 1851 by producing his most restrictively “national” of novels, programmatically and demonstratively shutting out a wider world in order to produce an image of Britain that negatively foreshadows the kind of autarkic, autotelic fantasies of single cultures associated with the classic functionalist ethnography of the early twentieth century, as practiced by such luminaries as Bronislaw Malinowski and Franz Boas. “Negatively” is key here, since anticipations of ethnography in nineteenth-century British (autoethnographic) fiction typically involve representation of the nation as “a form of anticulture whose features define by opposition the ideals [later] attributed to genuine cultures” (Buzard, Disorienting 21). Whereas the fast-disappearing genuine culture of ethnographic literature was credited with the integrated totality of “a sturdy plant growth, each remotest leaf and twig of which is organically fed by the sap at the core” (Sapir 90–93), Britain's culture vouchsafed in Bleak House and exemplified in the tentacular Court of Chancery presents “a state of disastrous and inescapable interconnection,” “a culture-like vision of social totality that is simply marked with a minus sign” (Buzard, Disorienting 21).en_US
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.publisherCambridge University Pressen_US
dc.relation.isversionofhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1060150310000082en_US
dc.rightsCreative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0en_US
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/en_US
dc.sourceBuzard via Mark Szarkoen_US
dc.title"The Country of the Plague": Anticulture and Autoethnography in Dickens's 1850sen_US
dc.typeArticleen_US
dc.identifier.citationBuzard, James. ““The Country of the Plague”: Anticulture and Autoethnography in Dickens‟s 1850s.” Victorian Literature and Culture 38.02 (2010): 413–419.en_US
dc.contributor.departmentMassachusetts Institute of Technology. School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciencesen_US
dc.contributor.approverBuzard, James
dc.contributor.mitauthorBuzard, James
dc.relation.journalVictorian Literature and Cultureen_US
dc.eprint.versionAuthor's final manuscripten_US
dc.type.urihttp://purl.org/eprint/type/JournalArticleen_US
eprint.statushttp://purl.org/eprint/status/PeerRevieweden_US
dspace.orderedauthorsBuzard, Jamesen
dc.identifier.orcidhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-8220-4108
mit.licenseOPEN_ACCESS_POLICYen_US
mit.metadata.statusComplete


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