Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-mkpzs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T20:28:06.611Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Index

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2021

Timothy Gao
Affiliation:
Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

Summary

Type
Chapter
Information
Virtual Play and the Victorian Novel
The Ethics and Aesthetics of Fictional Experience
, pp. 217 - 222
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - ND
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

Index

Abercrombie, John, 148
actuality, 4, 67
affordance, 5, 137, 176
and disjunction, 109, 112
anthologies, 123125
apRoberts, Ruth
on situation ethics, 8889, 91
on the aesthetics of casuistry, 8990
on Trollope’s characterisation, 96
architecture, imaginary, 31, 142143, 164
Arthur, Anthony, 8487
as imaginative-logical structure, 28
associationism (philosophy), 147
attachment (affect), 117118, See also parasociality
Auerbach, Erich, 50, 166
authorial power, 3740, 4446, 4849, 68
Auyoung, Elaine, 2, 5, 110
Azim, Firdous, 42
Balzac, Honoré de, 105, 144
Barter, Amy, 123125, 138
Barthes, Roland
‘The Death of the Author’, 51
‘The Reality Effect’, 143145, 170
belief, as literary response, 37, 74, 142, 148150, 153154, 178, See also double consciousness
Bentham, Jeremy, 2829, 160
Berlant, Lauren, 117
Bodenheimer, Rosemary, 141
book history, 112114
Brontë siblings, 2527, 4041, 47, 51, See also Brontë Charlotte
Brontë, Charlotte
critical reception of, 54, 5657
‘Farewell to Angria’, 119121, 135
identification with characters, 4345, 54
Jane Eyre, 2, 14, 22, 2728, 114
juvenilia, 2526, 4041, 4344, 4647, 51, 115, 142143
recounts of play, 4043, 51
reputation for disinterestedness and indulgence, 37, 5658, 68
Shirley, 63
The Professor, See Professor The (main entry)
transition from juvenilia to novels, 2526, 119121
Villette, 22, 54, 114
Brooks, Peter, 3
Brown, Kate, 25, 66, 115
castle-building (idiom), 150, 163, 166167
casuistry, 88, 96, 102
causation, narrative, 87, 91, 95, 102
Cave, Terence, 5
Cervantes, Miguel de, 6
Chesterton, Gilbert Keith, 104, 106
children
anxieties about imaginativeness, 148150
capacity for imitation, 148150
consistency in play, 33
inclination for participation, 49
possessiveness, 41, 117, See also developmental psychology
closure, in paracosmic play, 120
Cohen, David, 2324, 33, See also Root-Bernstein, Michele
Cohn, Elisha, 114
Coleridge, Derwent, See Coleridge, Hartley
Coleridge, Hartley, 20, 82, 142
critical reception of, 148149, 167
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, 108
colonialism, 10, 136, 177
Crichton-Browne, James, 149151
Dames, Nicholas
on contextualist literary studies and Hegel, 5354
on The Newcomes, 127129
on virtuality and literary studies, 10
Davis, Lennard, 57, 145146, 168, 178
daydream, 2, 16, 32, 114, 120, 141, See also castle-building (idiom)
De Quincey, Thomas, 1718, 21, 7981, 117, 148
obligations to characters, 117
De Quincey, William, See De Quincey, Thomas
Defoe, Daniel
Robinson Crusoe, 19, 24, 30
Deleuze, Gilles, 3
delusion,
history of medicine, 150151
in Little Dorrit, 164 See also double consciousness; hallucination, as analogy
description
pleasures of, 144146, 161162
theory and purpose, 143146
developmental psychology, 2324
in the nineteenth century, 148151, See also Crichton-Browne, James
Dickens, Charles
Bleak House, 15, 154
critical reception of, 78, 139141
David Copperfield, 2, 2627
Letters, 9
Little Dorrit, See Little Dorrit (main entry)
Master Humphrey’s Clock, 104105, 118
Mudfog Papers, 9
The Old Curiosity Shop, 78, 140
diluted narrative, 114, 155
disenchantment, 2829, 49
domestic fiction
as basis of realism, 36
as phantasmatic pleasure, 155, 161, 171
and utopian fiction, 3031
as virtual game genre, 175
double consciousness, 7, 21, 3738, 149, 170, 175176
Doyle, Arthur Conan, 15, 8182
Duma, Alexandre, 107108
Eagleton, Terry, 62
ecphrasis, See hypotyposis
Eliot, George
Adam Bede, 48
Daniel Deronda, 108, 113114
Middlemarch, 130, 132
Scenes of Clerical Life, 155
"Silly Novels by Lady Novelists", 36, 39
and sequels, 113114
ethics of fiction, 4446, 8990, 176178, See also casuistry
Fables (Aesop), 41
Felski, Rita, 12, 176
fictional facts
history and ubiquity, 1819
ontological incompleteness, 7981, 8586
fictionality,
development of, 2830
as distinguished from literariness, 8, 39, 107, 117, 119, 154, See also novel, history of
Fielding, Henry, 7, 9, 19
Flaubert, Gustave, 6, 50
Foucault, Michel, 161
Freud, Sigmund, 3
Furneaux, Holly, 113, 119
Gallagher, Catherine
‘fictionality in its infancy’, 1617
on novel referentiality and non-referentiality, 57, 27
on the ambivalence of novel fictionality, 39
Gaskell, Elizabeth
Letters, 26, 108
The Life of Charlotte Brontë, 2526, 3536
Genette, Gérard, 4950
genius, literary, 35
as contrasted with Genii, 37
as empirical ability, 35
as experiential ability, 153154
Brontë on Thackeray, 40
historical relationship with madness, 140, 151153
in children participating in paracosmic play, 21, 149
geography
history of, 24
imaginary, 1415, 21, 26, 2930, 142143, 158
Gibson, William, 4
giftedness, See genius, literary; development psychology
Gissing, George, 161
Glen, Heather
on Jane Eyre, 5657
on the Brontë juvenilia, 4445
on The Professor, 5859, 6162
god-like author,
incarnation, 52
use of narrative miracles, 4650 See also authorial power
Goodman, Lesley, 8
Greiner, Rae, 10
hallucination,
as analogy, 139141, 153 See also perception, theories of
Hardy, Barbara, 162163, 171
Hayot, Eric, 33
hermeneutics of suspicion, 2, 176, See also post-critical reading
Hillis Miller, Joseph
on Anthony Trollope’s play, 32
on Dickens and the prison, 158
on George Eliot and performative writing, 48
on Trollope’s characters, 93
history of science, 147148
problems of pathologisation, 150153
Holland, Henry, 148
homosociality, 123
hypotyposis, 144145, 167, 170
improvisation
narrative, 7173, 75, 87
poetic, 7071
relationship to restriction, 7679
improvvisatore, See improvisation, poetic
incompleteness, narrative, 8182
intertextuality, 130, 133134
ironic imagination, See double consciousness
Jacox, Francis
anxieties about play, 149
rethinking of play and genius, 154
James, Henry
‘Anthony Trollope’, 70
‘Daniel Deronda A Conversation’, 108
‘Honoré de Balzac’, 105
Roderick Hudson, 134
The Tragic Muse, 105, 126, 144
Jameson, Anna
‘A Revelation of Childhood’, 22
critical reception of, 167
on the improvvisatore, 82
labour
fictional, 64
intellectual and physical, 6364
representations of, 6264, 6667
writing as, 36, 79
Lamb, Charles, 88
family history, 152
‘The Sanity of True Genius’, 152153
law of non-contradiction, Aristotelian, 81
law of the excluded middle, Aristotelian, 81
Leavis, F. R.
on Little Dorrit, 161
on Thackeray, 110111, 146
Leavis, Q. D.
on Jane Eyre and wish-fulfilment, 37, 56
on Little Dorrit, 161
Levine, Caroline, 134
on affordances, 5
on Bleak House and networks, 128129, 134
Levine, George
on ‘another realism, 52
on anti-literary manifestos, 58, 113
on realist disenchantment, 49
on Thackeray and belatedness, 129
on Thackeray’s intertextuality, 132
on Trollope’s variations, 76
Lewes, George Henry
on Dickens and hallucination, 139141, 151152
on play and fiction, 3, 155156
literality, 45, 15, 6364, 164167, 171, See also metaphor
literary form
as imaginative-logical structure, 9, 34, 175
as logical-imaginative structure, 9, 34, 175
imagined and impossible, 107109
limits of, 112114, 121
networks as, 128130
literary value, 2, 178
of imaginative experience, 154
of ingenuity, 7173, 87, 8990
of juvenilia, 2526
of vicariousness, 37, 4446
of wallowing in fiction, 106, 108109, See also fictionality, as distinguished from literariness
Little Dorrit (Dickens)
Amy’s fantasies, 169171
Clennam’s room, 170
conflict between reality and fantasy, 164
imagined objects, 159162, 168169, 171173
Mr Dorrit’s castle, 163
Mr Dorrit’s death, 164
narrative forecasting, 163, 171, 173
prisons and imprisonment, 160, 164, 171
Rigaud and Cavalletto, 158162
thematic structure, 158159, 163
Young John Chivery, 171173
Lowe, Brigid, 10
on belief and imagining, 7, 3738
on fiction’s sensuous imaginative function, 154155
on fiction’s sensuous imaginative function, 142, 145
on subjective participation in literature, 2, 8
MacKeith, Stephen, See Cohen, David
MacNish, Robert, 148
Malkin, Benjamin Heath, 20See also paracosms, Allestone
Malkin, Thomas, See paracosms, Allestone
Malone, Catherine, 62
Marland, P. R., 152153
marriage plot, 9798, 129132
metalepsis, 4952, 74, 165
metaphor, 63, 164167
Michie, Helena, 97
Miller, Andrew H., 8990
Miller, D. A.
on the limits of the narratable, 113114
on the novel’s logic of insufficiency, 82
on the novel’s need for restrictions, 7879
miniaturisation, 89, 4546, 156, 159160, 170, 173, See also toys
More, Thomas, 29
Nabokov, Vladimir, 38, 50
narrative closure, 83, 107, 112
and the serial, 112114
in paracosmic play, 114116, See also paracosmic play, ending or ceasing
reader discontent with, 134
narrative detail, 144145
narratology, 15, 8182
New Formalism, 128
Newman, Neville, 63
non-fictional forms, 6, 19, 21, 27
novel, history of, 57, 1520, 2628
omnipotence, See authorial power
Otto, Peter, 4
paracosmic play
ending or ceasing, 117, 119122
history and psychology of, 2224, 116118, 148149
nineteenth-century responses to, 148149
rules of, 18, 33, 77, 7981
paracosms
Allestone, 2021, 24, 29
Anna Jameson’s, See Jameson, Anna, ‘A Revelation of Childhood’
Ejuxria, See Coleridge, Hartley
Glasstown, Angria, Gondal, and Gaaldine, See Brontë, Charlotte, juvenilia
Gombroon and Tigrosylvania, See De Quincey, Thomas
the castle in the air, 3133
parasociality, 78, 106, 118119
patch notes (software), 174
Pavel, Thomas, 51
on dolls and Anna Karenina, 3
on the double consciousness of play, 42
Pearl, Jason, 2930
perception, theories of, 147148
persistence, virtual, 33, 106, 125
in paracosmic play, 116117
Picker, John, 114
Plato, 6, 18
play
as analogy, 3, 42, 146149, 153154, 156, 178
definitions, 16
Plotz, John
on defining the virtual, 35
on iterativeness and seriality, 112
on the non-serial novel, 114
pornography, 66, 177178
post-critical reading, 12, 176178
proprioception, 159, 165166, See also perception
pseudofactual posture, 27, 29, See also double consciousness
Rancière, Jacques, 50
Ratcliffe, Sophie, 84, 96, 103
reading, modes of, 1, 108109
realism
and theology, 5052
as social representation, 61
empiricism and imaginativeness, 3637, 4748, 102, 140
history of term, 140
self-consciousness, 58, 114
referentiality (and non-referentiality), 58, 21, 2728, 39, 4142, 64
robotics, 177, See also toys, Dickens’s automatons
Root-Bernstein, Michele
on paracosmic play and creativity, 24
on paracosmic play’s emotional significance, 117
on paracosmic play’s consistency, 3233, 116
Rose, Jonathan, 15, 17, 27
Ruskin, John, 110, 134
Russell, David, 88
Ruth, Jennifer, 6364, 6768
Ryan, Marie-Laure, 163
Said, Edward, 136
Saler, Michael, 7
Sayers, Dorothy, 50
Schaeffer, Jean-Marie, 4
Scott, Walter, 19, 107
Second Life (game), 4
Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky
paranoid reading, 62, 86
reparative reading, 68
self-help, 6061
Self-Help (Smiles), See Smiles, Samuel
self-narrativisation, 103
sequels and series, 104106, 112114
seriality, 103, 112113
Shakespeare, William, 150, 167
Shuttleworth, Sally
on medical anxieties around paracosmic play, 116, 149
on the history of paracosmic play, 2223
on The Professor, 6162
on the rules of paracosmic play, 18
simulation, 810
situation ethics, See casuistry
Smiles, Samuel, 6061, 65
sophistry, 89, 91, 99, 102, See also casuistry
Stannard, Henrietta (John Strange Winter), 109, 111112
Stoehr, Taylor, 153, 165167
suspension of disbelief, See double consciousness
Sussman, Matthew, 9192, 9798, 100
sustenance, 161162, 173, See also Sedgwick, Eve Kosofky (reparative reading)
Sutherland, John, 87
Swift, Jonathan, 2728
sympathy, 89
Tennyson, Alfred Lord, 108, 110, 118
Thackeray, William
‘De Finibus’, 135136
‘Proposals for a Continuation of Ivanhoe, 107108, 133
and Charterhouse School, 123, 138
and Fable-land, 138
attachment to characters, 105106
critical reception of, 40
Pendennis, 15, 130, 132
relationship with characters, 108109, 135136
revisiting of characters, 105106, 130, 133
The Newcomes, See The Newcomes (main entry)
Vanity Fair, 2, 130
The Newcomes (Thackeray)
Colonel Newcome’s history, 127, 131132
Coventry Island, 136137
Dobbin’s cameo, 130
ending, 135, 138
family tree, 126127
Grey Friars, 123125, 137
Mrs Mackenzie, 131
replaceability and irreplaceability of relationships, 129130, 133
thematic structure, 127128
The Professor (Brontë)
contrast to Jane Eyre, 5859, 68
Crimsworth and Frances’s school, 66
Crimsworth and gifts, 60
ending, 6667
individualism, 5961
mise-en-abyme, 5556
narrative erotics, 6466
narrative frame, 59
narrative style, 5860
preface, 5859, 144
publication history, 58
realism, 68
relationship between the Crimsworth brothers, 5960
representations of work, 6263, 6667
the ‘Hill of Difficulty’, 5859, 6566
Zoraide Reuter, 6465
The Sims (game), 174176
The Small House at Allington (Trollope)
Adolphus Crosbie, 99102
dilemma of moving, 93
Joseph Cradell, 95
Lily’s dilemma, 9596
Mrs Dale, 95
retracting of decisions, 9394, 99102
stubbornness of characters, 9196
Tillotson, Geoffrey, 105106
Tolkien, J. R. R., 38
Tolstoy, Leo, 3
toys
as analogy for realism, 3
Branwell Brontë’s soldiers, 4042, 51
Dickens’s automatons, 89
George Henry Lewes’s wooden horse, 23, 175
Thackeray’s puppets, 2
The Sims as adult dollhouse, 174
Trilling, Lionel, 158159
Trollope, Anthony
‘On English Novelists of the Present Day’, 31
An Autobiography, 2, 8, 3133, 79, 85, 87, 96, 103
and Mrs Proudie, 8, 8486
and narrative formulas, 73, 7577
and prolifixity, 70
and psychological characterisation, 9193
Barchester Towers, 73, 84
Can You Forgive Her?, 9899
Chronicles of Barsetshire (series), 83, 121
compositional process, 75, 7879, 8687
critical reception of, 70, 7576, 84, 87
Framley Parsonage, 75, 108
Orley Farm, 73, 87
revision process, 9697, 103
revisiting of characters, 105
The Eustace Diamonds, 87, 90
The Last Chronicle of Barset, 8485, 121, 135
The Prime Minister, 90
The Small House at Allington, See The Small House at Allington (main entry)
Velleman, J. David, 5
vicarious reading, 2, 8, 146147, 155, 178, See also post-critical reading
vicariousness, 8, See also wish-fulfilment
video gaming, See virtuality, digital
virtuality
definition, 35
digital, 6, 33, 142, 177, See also The Sims
social and political, 4
Wall, Stephen, 92, 95, 100
Walton, Kendall, 3
Watt, Ian, 19, 27
Wellesley, Arthur (Duke of Wellington), 4042, 46, 5152
Williams, William Smith, 40
Winnicott, Donald, 178
wish-fulfilment, 53, 56
Wood, James, 144
Zygmunt, Lawrence, 130131

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure no-reply@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Index
  • Timothy Gao, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
  • Book: Virtual Play and the Victorian Novel
  • Online publication: 06 April 2021
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Index
  • Timothy Gao, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
  • Book: Virtual Play and the Victorian Novel
  • Online publication: 06 April 2021
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Index
  • Timothy Gao, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
  • Book: Virtual Play and the Victorian Novel
  • Online publication: 06 April 2021
Available formats
×