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Disorienting Fiction : The Autoethnographic Work of Nineteenth-Century British Novels /

This book gives a revisionist account of the nineteenth-century British novel and its role in the complex historical process that ultimately gave rise to modern anthropology's concept of culture and its accredited researcher, the Participant Observer. Buzard reads the great nineteenth-century n...

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Détails bibliographiques
Auteur principal: Buzard, James
Format: Électronique eBook
Langue:Inglés
Publié: Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, 2005.
Collection:Book collections on Project MUSE.
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:Texto completo
Description
Résumé:This book gives a revisionist account of the nineteenth-century British novel and its role in the complex historical process that ultimately gave rise to modern anthropology's concept of culture and its accredited researcher, the Participant Observer. Buzard reads the great nineteenth-century novels of Charles Dickens, Charlotte Brontë, George Eliot, and others as "metropolitan autoethnographies" that began to exercise and test the ethnographic imagination decades in advance of formal modern ethnography--and that did so while focusing on Western European rather than on distant Oriental subjects. --From publisher's description.
Description matérielle:1 online resource (328 pages).
ISBN:9781400826674