LEADER 00000cam a2200685Ii 4500 001 on1127052096 003 OCoLC 005 20210122115926.8 006 m o d 007 cr cnu---unuuu 008 191111s2019 gw ob 000 0 eng d 019 1127246985 020 9783825378653|q(electronic book) 020 3825378659|q(electronic book) 020 |z9783825369835 020 |z3825369838 035 (OCoLC)1127052096|z(OCoLC)1127246985 040 N$T|beng|erda|epn|cN$T|dN$T|dOCLCO|dYDXIT|dEBLCP|dYDX |dOCLCQ 049 RIDW 050 4 PR5398|b.R65 2019 082 04 823/.7|223 090 PR5398|b.R65 2019 100 1 Rohleder, Rebekka,|0https://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/ n2010052894|eauthor. 245 10 "A different earth" :|bLiterary space in Mary Shelley's novels /|cRebekka Rohleder. 264 1 Heidelberg :|bUniversitätsverlag Winter,|c[2019] 300 1 online resource. 336 text|btxt|2rdacontent 337 computer|bc|2rdamedia 338 online resource|bcr|2rdacarrier 340 |gpolychrome|2rdacc 347 text file|2rdaft 490 1 Britannica et Americana ;|vDritte Folge, Band 34 504 Includes bibliographical references. 505 0 Cover; Titel; Imprint; Table of Contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction: "Hedged-in cornfields and measured hills; 1 "No monument": Romanticism, Literature and Space; 1.1 Literary Space and the Spatial Turn; 1.1.1 Spatial turn, topographical turn, topological turn; 1.1.2 Literary Space; 1.2 "Reserved for the royal possessor": Literary Space and/as Social Space; 1.2.1 Reading Social Space; 1.2.2 Performing Literary Space; 1.3 "The offspring of art, the nursling of nature": Mary Shelley and the History of Space; 1.3.1 Histories of Space; 1.3.2 Reading Romantic Literary Space 505 8 2 "The Last Man" and "the order of the systematic world2.1 "On the giddy height"; 2.1.1 Living Maps; 2.1.2 Writing in Windsor; 2.1.3 "Seeing a battle"; 2.2 "The question of contagion"; 2.2.1 Reading the Plague; 2.2.2 Geographies of Disease; 2.2.3 Lost Spaces; 2.3 Cities of the Plague; 2.3.1 Constantinople/Stamboul; 2.3.2 Rome: Visiting "the scene which they beheld"; 2.3.3 Fanatics in Paris, Ghosts in Versailles; 2.3.4 London, "sufficiently changed"; 3 "A race of devils would be propagated upon the earth": "Frankenstein", Imaginary Populations, and Imaginary Spaces 505 8 3.1 "A world already possessed": Naturalising Poverty3.1.1 Spaces of Perfectibility; 3.1.2 Anti-Utopian Islands; 3.2 "The production of men": From Thought Experiment to Fiction; 3.2.1 "The Last Man": Imagining a Depopulated Earth; 3.2.2 The 1831 "Frankenstein" and the Children of the Poor; 3.3 "Remember Utopia!" Gothic Imaginary Spaces in the 1818 "Frankenstein"; 3.3.1 Hidden Spaces; 3.3.2 Spaces of Pursuit; 3.4 "The encroachment of the polar ice" : Resisting the Naturalisation Effect; 3.4.1 Imagining the Arctic; 3.4.2 Mutability; 4 "Lodore": Making the Best of the Conventionalities 505 8 4.1 "A bird of beauty, brooding in its own fair nest"4.1.1 Travelling; 4.1.2 Cottage, Garden, Study; 4.1.3 Drawing, Furnishing, Acting; 4.2 "Indeed, in England or America, she lived in a desart"; 4.2.1 "The 'falls' of Lodore"; 4.2.2 On the Impossibility of Travelling from Italy to England; 4.2.3 The City as Theatre; Conclusion: "Yet is it true that we do not believe in ghosts?"; Bibliography; Backcover 520 8 Inspired by the?spatial turn,? this book takes a fresh look at three of Mary Shelley?s novels:?Frankenstein?,?The Last Man?, and?Lodore?. It examines the literary and social spaces constructed in these three novels. The novels complement each other in the way in which the interaction between text and space is played through in each of them. In all three, however, space emerges as a socially and politically powerful construct, and the literary text itself is seen to play an important role in its construction. 0The three novels also implicitly reflect on their own role in this process. In this way, Shelley makes the naturalising logic of the spatial imagination visible, and challenges this logic in the process. Thus, the focus on literary space opens up an interesting perspective from which Shelley?s political and aesthetic concerns can be re-examined. 588 0 Online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on November 18, 2019). 590 eBooks on EBSCOhost|bEBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America 600 10 Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft,|d1797-1851|0https:// id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n79061063|xCriticism and interpretation.|0https://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/ sh99005576 600 17 Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft,|d1797-1851.|2fast|0https:// id.worldcat.org/fast/36781 650 0 Geography in literature.|0https://id.loc.gov/authorities/ subjects/sh94005295 650 0 Society in literature.|0https://id.loc.gov/authorities/ subjects/sh94008649 650 0 Space and time in literature.|0https://id.loc.gov/ authorities/subjects/sh85125914 650 7 Criticism and interpretation.|2fast|0https:// id.worldcat.org/fast/1198648 650 7 Geography in literature.|2fast|0https://id.worldcat.org/ fast/940561 650 7 Society in literature.|2fast|0https://id.worldcat.org/fast /1896128 650 7 Space and time in literature.|2fast|0https:// id.worldcat.org/fast/1127645 655 4 Electronic books. 655 7 Criticism, interpretation, etc.|2fast|0https:// id.worldcat.org/fast/1411635 776 08 |iPrint version:|aRohleder, Rebekka.|tDifferent earth. Literary space in Mary Shelley?s novels.|dHeidelberg : Universitätsverlag C. Winter 2019|z9783825369835 |w(OCoLC)1098188592 830 0 Britannica et Americana ;|0https://id.loc.gov/authorities/ names/n83723599|v3. Folge, Bd. 34. 856 40 |uhttps://rider.idm.oclc.org/login?url=http:// search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site& db=nlebk&AN=2291595|zOnline ebook via EBSCO. Access restricted to current Rider University students, faculty, and staff. 856 42 |3Instructions for reading/downloading the EBSCO version of this ebook|uhttp://guides.rider.edu/ebooks/ebsco 901 MARCIVE 20231220 948 |d20210519|cEBSCO|tEBSCOebooksAcademic 1-22-21 4032|lridw 994 92|bRID