Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 The Dickens Phenomenon (1836–1870)
- 2 The Birth of the Dickens Industry and the Reaction against Victorianism (1870–1914)
- 3 Dickens among the Moderns (1915–1940)
- 4 The Tide Turns (1940–1959)
- 5 Dickens and Mainstream Academic Criticism (1960–1969)
- 6 The Dickens Centenary and After (1970–1979)
- 7 Dickens in an Age of Theory I: New Theories, New Readings (1980–2000)
- 8 Dickens in an Age of Theory II: The Persistence of Traditional Criticism (1980–2000)
- 9 The Future of Dickens Studies: Trends in the Twenty-First Century
- Major Works by Charles Dickens
- Chronological List of Works Cited
- Index
9 - The Future of Dickens Studies: Trends in the Twenty-First Century
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 The Dickens Phenomenon (1836–1870)
- 2 The Birth of the Dickens Industry and the Reaction against Victorianism (1870–1914)
- 3 Dickens among the Moderns (1915–1940)
- 4 The Tide Turns (1940–1959)
- 5 Dickens and Mainstream Academic Criticism (1960–1969)
- 6 The Dickens Centenary and After (1970–1979)
- 7 Dickens in an Age of Theory I: New Theories, New Readings (1980–2000)
- 8 Dickens in an Age of Theory II: The Persistence of Traditional Criticism (1980–2000)
- 9 The Future of Dickens Studies: Trends in the Twenty-First Century
- Major Works by Charles Dickens
- Chronological List of Works Cited
- Index
Summary
REVIEWING DICKENS CRITICISM in 2003, Frederick Karl observed that “if the present sampling of recent critical and scholarly books on Dickens is any indication of what is happening and what is yet to come, Dickens studies are more than alive and well; they have turned their subject into an iconic figure, the prose Shakespeare” (610). As Karl suggests, all signs point to continuing strength, even growth, in the Dickens Industry. Books and articles continue to appear every year as a new crop of Dickens scholars revisits the novels, stories and the journalism to find some hitherto undiscovered nugget of wisdom about Dickens's artistry or social concerns, or to apply new theories to works not yet deconstructed, historicized, or scrutinized through the lens of gender or culture. What directions such studies might take can be surmised from a brief survey of criticism written during the first years of the new millennium.
Surveys and Biographies
Dickens scholars celebrated the millennium by issuing a number of retrospectives and surveys that attempt to define Dickens — the man, his work, and the industry that has grown up around both — for a new generation. One of the first of such books to appear was Robert Newsom's Charles Dickens Revisited (2000) in the Twayne's English Authors series. Twenty years earlier Harland Nelson had produced a study of the novelist focused on issues important to undergraduate students.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Dickens IndustryCritical Perspectives 1836–2005, pp. 239 - 260Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2008