Longman's new Cultural Editions Series,Hard Times, by Charles Dickens, edited by Jeff Nunokawa, includes Books 1-3 ofHard Timesand contextual materials on the age of Dickens.
Gage McWeeny is Assistant Professor of English at Williams College, where he specializes in Victorian literature and culture. He is the author of articles that have appeared in _Victorian Poetry_ and _Critical Matrix_, and writes cultural criticism for BBC radio. He is currently at work on a book about social theory and Victorian literature called _The Comfort of Strangers: Sociality and Victorian LIterature_.
Jeff Nunokawa specializes in English literature from about 1830 till about 1900 at Princeton University. His first book, The Afterlife of Property, studies how the novels of Dickens and Eliot labor to preserve the idea of secure possession by overseeing its transfer from the sphere of a cold and uncertain economy to a happier realm of romance. Tame Passions of Wilde: Styles of Manageable Desire excavates the aspiration to imagine a form of desire as intense as those that compel us, but as light as the daydream or thought experiment safely under our control. His current project is a book whose working title is "Eros and Isolation: Getting Away from Others in Nineteenth Century Literature." This book brings a range of social theory to bear on writers like Austen, C. Brontë, Thackeray, Dickens and Eliot to figure out why it’s so hard to break free, even for a little while, from the groups that surround and define us. Most generally, he is interested in the ways that various ideas of society clash and collaborate with one another. Before his day is done, he hopes to write a book about Henry James.
List of Illustrations
v
About Longman Cultural Editions
vi
About This Edition
viii
Introduction
xi
Table of Dates
xx
Hard Times (1854)
3
(262)
Contexts
265
(86)
Condition of England
267
(35)
from Sybil, or the Two Nations (1845)
268
(1)
Benjamin Disraeli
from The Condition of the Working Class in 1844 (1845; English translation, 1892)
269
(9)
Friedrich Engels
``Midas'' and from ``Gospel of Mammonism,'' from Past and Present (1843)
278
(5)
Thomas Carlyle
from ``On Strike'' (1854)
283
(5)
Charles Dickens
from The Communist Manifesto (1848; English translation published 1888)
288
(14)
Karl Marx
Friedrich Engels
Utilitarianism, Political Economy, and Its Discontents
302
(18)
from An Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation (1789)
303
(5)
Jeremy Bentham
from ``Bentham'' (1838) and ``Coleridge'' (1840)
308
(4)
John Stuart Mill
``Captains of Industry'' from Past and Present (1843)
312
(3)
Thomas Carlyle
from ``Signs of the Times'' (1829)
315
(5)
Thomas Carlyle
Education
320
(20)
``Preface'' from A Series of Lessons (1831)
321
(2)
J. M. M'Culloch
from Autobiography (1873)
323
(11)
John Stuart Mill
``Of an Educational Character,'' from Our Mutual Friend (1865)
334
(6)
Charles Dickens
Victorian Reactions to Hard Times
340
(11)
the Examiner (September 9, 1854)
340
(2)
[John Forster]
from a review in The Rambler
342
(1)
Richard Simpson
Westminster Review, (October 1854)
342
(4)
``A Note on Hard Times.'' Cornhill Magazine (August 1860)
346
(1)
John Ruskin
from Atlantic Monthly (March 1877)
347
(1)
Edwin P. Whipple
from Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (April 1855)
348
(3)
Margaret Oliphant
Further Reading
351
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