Difference between revisions of "Cranford (Gaskell, 1853)"

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*10-11 scene in which Capt Brown reads aloud from picwick and Miss Jenkyns dismisses it as not as good as Johnson's Rasselas: "I consider it vulgar, and beneath the dignity of literature, to publish in numbers."
 
*10-11 scene in which Capt Brown reads aloud from picwick and Miss Jenkyns dismisses it as not as good as Johnson's Rasselas: "I consider it vulgar, and beneath the dignity of literature, to publish in numbers."
 
*14 Ms Deborah Jenkyns's letters "stately and grand, like herself"
 
*14 Ms Deborah Jenkyns's letters "stately and grand, like herself"
 +
*18 Capt Brown is struck and killed by a train whilst reading, presumably a new number of Pickwick?
  
 
===Materiality===
 
===Materiality===

Revision as of 15:39, 21 October 2017

Elizabeth Gaskell. Cranford. Pub. 1851-3. Ed. Elizabeth Porges Watson and Dinah Birch. Oxford World's Classics, 2011.

General

  • serialized in Household Words Dec 1851-May 1853, whilst Bleak House (1853) was being published
  • Forster a fan (Intro)
  • 4 positioning the audience as urban: "Have you any red silk umbrellas in London?"
  • also not talking about money and the class contrast with commerce and trade prefiguring North and South (Gaskell, 1855)
  • 5 vulgarity, "elegant economy" keywords
  • 6 protesting against the train - modernity

Theme Tracking

Reading/Writing

  • 10-11 scene in which Capt Brown reads aloud from picwick and Miss Jenkyns dismisses it as not as good as Johnson's Rasselas: "I consider it vulgar, and beneath the dignity of literature, to publish in numbers."
  • 14 Ms Deborah Jenkyns's letters "stately and grand, like herself"
  • 18 Capt Brown is struck and killed by a train whilst reading, presumably a new number of Pickwick?

Materiality

Shakespeare

  • 14 plumed wars Othello