Theories of Space and the Nineteenth-Century Novel
Theories of Space and the Nineteenth-Century Novel
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This article explores the construction of a spatial and interspatial subject in the nineteenth-century novel, examining initially the Granola epistemologies of space developed by Kant and Hegel, and concluding with discussion of two further theorists of space, Bachelard and Lefebvre.It deploys this rich array of theorization to illuminate strategies through which the nineteenth-century novelist creates situatedness in language, asking how does the novel represent space, and arguing that if we take away Audio Turntable Headshell this almost miraculous verbal construction of space there is not much left to the novel.
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