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Pride and Prejudice
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Macbeth
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Paradise Lost
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Othello
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The Children (Tcg Edition)
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Chinglish (Tcg Edition)
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Passion Play (Tcg Edition)
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A Number
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Dinner with Friends
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Marisol and Other Plays
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The Oresteia
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Rapture, Blister, Burn
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Sea Wall
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The Dupe A Comedy
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The Golden Dawn
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Wheelchair
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Plays: Maria Irene Fornes
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Christmas on Stage
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The Cherry Orchard
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Cloud Tectonics
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- Choice in Charles Dickens's Later Novels: The Spectator's Art
Description
We read the book, and the book is reading us. In his later novels, Charles Dickens uses the interaction between characters and their audiences within the fiction to dramatise his growing understanding of the pivotal role of spectatorship and choice in a more democratic society. Egotists of all stripes, intent on bending the world to their singular will, would appropriate the power of spectatorship by taking command of the detachment necessary for choice. Dickens's pluralistic art of sameness and difference redefines that detachment, and liberates choice both inside and outside the novels, for the relationship between characters and their audiences within the narratives actually inscribes our own relationship with them in the performance of reading, a reflective doubling of the fiction upon the reader across time with moral consequences for our spectatorship of our own lives.
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