Skip Nav Destination
Close Modal
Search Results for
privacy
Update search
Filter
- Title
- Authors
- Author Affiliations
- Full Text
- Abstract
- Keywords
- DOI
- ISBN
- eISBN
- ISSN
- EISSN
- Issue
- Volume
- References
Filter
- Title
- Authors
- Author Affiliations
- Full Text
- Abstract
- Keywords
- DOI
- ISBN
- eISBN
- ISSN
- EISSN
- Issue
- Volume
- References
Filter
- Title
- Authors
- Author Affiliations
- Full Text
- Abstract
- Keywords
- DOI
- ISBN
- eISBN
- ISSN
- EISSN
- Issue
- Volume
- References
Filter
- Title
- Authors
- Author Affiliations
- Full Text
- Abstract
- Keywords
- DOI
- ISBN
- eISBN
- ISSN
- EISSN
- Issue
- Volume
- References
Filter
- Title
- Authors
- Author Affiliations
- Full Text
- Abstract
- Keywords
- DOI
- ISBN
- eISBN
- ISSN
- EISSN
- Issue
- Volume
- References
Filter
- Title
- Authors
- Author Affiliations
- Full Text
- Abstract
- Keywords
- DOI
- ISBN
- eISBN
- ISSN
- EISSN
- Issue
- Volume
- References
NARROW
Format
Subjects
Journal
Article Type
Date
Availability
1-20 of 80 Search Results for
privacy
Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account
Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
1
Sort by
Journal Article
Novel (2024) 57 (2): 226–243.
Published: 01 August 2024
...Oriah Amit Abstract This article explores Anthony Trollope's attempts to answer a question that preoccupied Britain's Liberal party in the second half of the nineteenth century: Should all subjects have an equal right to privacy? Trollope's Palliser novels Phineas Finn (1867–68) and The Eustace...
Journal Article
Novel (2010) 43 (1): 169–175.
Published: 01 May 2010
... can openly address anyone, at periodic intervals, with dispatch and presumptive privacy. This new technology for ordinary communication at a distance influenced the novel in many ways. Novels were cast in the form of correspondence by letter; the post facilitated the dissemination of physical novels...
Journal Article
Novel (2004) 37 (1-2): 216–220.
Published: 01 August 2004
...RUTH MACK PATRICIA MEYER SPACKS, Privacy: Concealing the Eighteenth-Century Self (Chicago: U of Chicago P, 2003), pp. 256, $36.00. WOLFRAM SCHMIDGEN, Eighteenth-Century Fiction and the Law of Property (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2002), pp. 274, $65.00. Copyright © Novel Corp. 2003...
Journal Article
Novel (2007) 40 (1-2): 175–177.
Published: 01 August 2007
...STACEY MARGOLIS Milette Shamir, Inexpressible Privacy: The Interior Life of Antebellum American Literature (Philadelphia: U of Pennsylvania P, 2006), pp. 282, $55.00. Copyright © Novel Corp. 2006 2006 The Secret Lives of Houses
Milette Shamir, inexpressible...
Journal Article
Novel (2011) 44 (3): 483–487.
Published: 01 November 2011
... of the
interview—a trend initially associated with the American press and its reputed lack of
decorum. Rubery analyzes responses to this trend in James’s fiction and elsewhere, con-
necting the rise of the interview with new developments in the discourse of privacy near
the fin de siècle.
While he takes...
Journal Article
Novel (2007) 40 (1-2): 171–174.
Published: 01 August 2007
...STUART BURROWS STACEY MARGOLIS, The Public Life of Privacy in Nineteenth-Century American Literature (Durham: Duke UP, 2005), pp. 248, cloth, $74.95, paper, $21.95. Copyright © Novel Corp. 2006 2006 Reviews
Deliberalizing...
Journal Article
Novel (2015) 48 (2): 296–299.
Published: 01 August 2015
... the symmetries of sympathy nor through Kantian respect but in a much more intricate particularity. Inheriting the impasses of moral philosophy, romanticism chooses to dwell with these particularities, to hover over the proximity of one subject with another, where privacy can coexist with relation rather than...
Journal Article
Novel (2013) 46 (2): 319–322.
Published: 01 August 2013
... in the theater
symptomatize the frustrated theatrical ambitions of the novel as a genre, from the middle
of the nineteenth century to the middle of the twentieth. Against the “success” of novelistic
privacy, Kurnick inventively deploys the concept of theatrical literalization: the process...
Journal Article
Novel (2017) 50 (1): 141–145.
Published: 01 May 2017
... Allan Poe, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Herman Melville, Fanny Fern, Harriet Jacobs, and James Fenimore Cooper are cast as “thought experiments on the new democratic reality” (20). The phrase “thought experiments” may be familiar to readers of Margolis's first book, The Public Life of Privacy in Nineteenth...
Journal Article
Novel (2004) 38 (1): 21–40.
Published: 01 May 2004
... 22 : 1564 ( 10 August 1959 ): 4 –5. Nelson , Deborah . Pursuing Privacy in Cold War America . Chicago: U of Chicago P, 2002 . Pease , Donald . “National Narratives, Postnational Narration.” Modern Fiction Studies 43.1 ( 1997 ) 1 –23. Peel , Robin . “Sylvia Plath...
Journal Article
Novel (2017) 50 (1): 8–34.
Published: 01 May 2017
... and paper but also by the very space that contains pen and paper and carries the letters to him, the mobile and expansive environment of Pamela's pockets. Thus one of the novel's many metamorphoses takes place when a material object such as Pamela's pocket transforms into a space of privacy...
FIGURES
| View All (7)
Journal Article
Novel (1999) 33 (1): 119–121.
Published: 01 May 1999
... and material labor that was required to associate women with
privacy, men with publicity-and of the continual instability of that opposition.
Marcus's comparatist approach situates British domesticity in a broader continental
context and reveals the extent to which the definition of "home...
Journal Article
Novel (2018) 51 (1): 144–147.
Published: 01 May 2018
... openness into privacy and closure, and, on the other side, to build privacy and closure (or what we might think of as limitedness or specificity) into conditions of open or unfettered access” (155). Smart as these readings are, their focus on the two forms of utopia seems to miss a third option...
Journal Article
Novel (2020) 53 (1): 124–127.
Published: 01 May 2020
... Foucault, “the family is constructed in the name of privacy as a field for social control. State and family interpenetrate in mutually supportive anxiety. The desire for privacy creates nervousness about the intrusion of the state” (258). But his desire to dive deep into such matters presents...
Journal Article
Novel (2018) 51 (3): 533–537.
Published: 01 November 2018
..., Fraiman invokes the material, the actual, the real as a counter to the abstract, the ideological, the discursive. Things, practices, the interactions of bodies and things, the arrangement of things in spaces: these are the materials through which the basic needs for privacy, storage, adornment, routine...
Journal Article
Novel (2016) 49 (1): 5–9.
Published: 01 May 2016
... of denial of privacy in the execution of bodily functions, from bathroom, to showers, to sleeping and waking. Writing, from the liminal space of prison, while indeed an act of resistance, is also one of survival: it was the only activity in which I could dialogue with self, dwell for a time in an area...
Journal Article
Novel (2007) 40 (1-2): iv.
Published: 01 August 2007
... of Utah. She is the author of The Arblic Lfi of Privacy in NineteentttCerrttrry Arrtericnit
Lifernfnre. SARAH WINTER is Associate Professor of English at the University of Connecticut, Storrs.
Her research interests include the novel, rhetoric, and the history of the modern disciplines. PHIL^
GOULD...
Journal Article
Novel (2009) 42 (1): iii–iv.
Published: 01 May 2009
... and is now completing a book on mid-nineteenth-century theories
of mind and Victorian fiction. stacey margolis is associate professor of English at the University
of Utah. She is the author of The Public Life of Privacy in Nineteenth-Century American Literature and
is currently at work on a book...
Journal Article
Novel (2016) 49 (3): 429–448.
Published: 01 November 2016
... into an occasion for considering a disappointing public sphere, the pressure of consumerism invokes an open collective life apart from the novelistic biases toward privacy, domesticity, and nationhood—a life made apparent through the sense of belonging to a pleasure-seeking crowd, not through feelings...
Journal Article
Novel (2017) 50 (2): 255–277.
Published: 01 August 2017
... with the novel's historical grounding in the sociological and political ascent of privacy: the rise of the genre is tightly interwoven with the increased prevalence of private spaces and experiences in the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries (see, e.g., Watt ; Brooks, Body Work )—chief among...
1