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Title:Heidegger’s Bicycle : Interfering with Victorian Texts
Series:(Critical Inventions Series)
Author:Roger Ebbatson; John Schad, Series Editor
ISBN:1845191048 : 9781845191047
Format:Hardback
Size:152x229mm
Pages:172
Weight: .416 Kg.
Published:Sussex Academic Press - October 2006
List Price: 49.5 Pounds Sterling
Availability:In Print
Subjects:Literary theory


In the 1990s it was the French theorists such as Derrida, Lacan and Foucault who, with their stress on linguistic play and undecidability, took Victorian Studies by storm; now, it seems, it is the Germans who are coming. In Roger Ebbatson’s new book, Marx, Simmel, Benjamin and, above all, Heidegger are unleashed on a range of Victorian texts -- some unsuspecting, some all too suspecting. The results are alarming: Ebbatson begins with Tennyson overshadowed by empire and homosocial tensions and ends with Conan Doyle writing about a bicycle belonging to a character called Heidegger. In between, he makes bone-shaking progress over a Victorian terrain marked out by Thomas Hardy, Richard Jefferies, Gerard Manley Hopkins, and Robert Louis Stevenson; along the way, Ebbatson considers shipwrecks, money, nature, the South Seas Mission, and ‘final solutions’. Tennyson, we discover, was afraid of his own shadow, Hopkins’s greatest poem was created by erratic compasses, Hardy wrote like Kafka, Stevenson was drawn to murderous missionaries, and Conan Doyle applauded the concentration camp. Ebbatson shows us that what the Germans bring to our understanding of the nineteenth century is a terrible awareness of the darkest moments of the darkest moments of the twentieth century.

Introduction; Tennysonian Shadows: 'In the Garden at Swainston'; Fair Ships: A Victorian Poetic Chronotope; A Laodicean: Hardy and the Philosophy of Money; Sensations of Earth: Thomas Hardy and Richard Jefferies; The Guilty River: Wilkie Collins's Gothic Deafness; Stevenson's The Ebb-Tide: Missionary Endeavour in the Islands of Light; Dr Doyle's Uncanny Prognosis: Sherlock Holmes and The Final Solution; Index.

"This is a richly rewarding bookwhose stringent analysis of Hardy is matched by its subtle ability to tease out the difference and disjunction inhabiting the Victorian text generally. Recommended." -- Andrew Radford, Hardy Society Journal, Vol. 3, No. 2, Summer 2007.