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Victorian Fiction And the Cult of the Horse



The horse was an essential part of Victorian society, and its representations can be seen in a variety of texts. This study focuses on novels by Charles Dickens, Elizabeth Braddon, Anna Sewell, and George Moore, which explore the most controversial debates surrounding horses and horse-care. Through these texts, dominant ideologies of gender and class are created, promoted, and disrupted. more details
Key Features:
  • This study focuses on novels by Charles Dickens, Elizabeth Braddon, Anna Sewell, and George Moore, which explore the most controversial debates surrounding horses and horse-care.
  • Through these texts, dominant ideologies of gender and class are created, promoted, and disrupted.


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Features
Author Gina M. Dorre
Format Hardcover
ISBN 9780754655152
Publisher Ashgate Publishing
Manufacturer Ashgate Publishing
Description
The horse was an essential part of Victorian society, and its representations can be seen in a variety of texts. This study focuses on novels by Charles Dickens, Elizabeth Braddon, Anna Sewell, and George Moore, which explore the most controversial debates surrounding horses and horse-care. Through these texts, dominant ideologies of gender and class are created, promoted, and disrupted.

The horse was essential to the workings of Victorian society, and its representations, which are vast, ranging, and often contradictory, comprise a vibrant cult of the horse. Examining the representational, emblematic, and rhetorical uses of horses in a diversity of nineteenth-century texts, Gina M. Dorre shows how discourses about horses reveal and negotiate anxieties related to industrialism and technology, constructions of gender and sexuality, ruptures in the social fabric caused by class conflict and mobility, and changes occasioned by national "progress" and imperial expansion. She argues that as a cultural object, the horse functions as a repository of desire and despair in a society rocked by astonishing social, economic, and technological shifts. While representations of horses abound in Victorian fiction, Gina M. Dorre's study focuses on those novels by Charles Dickens, Elizabeth Braddon, Anna Sewell, and George Moore that engage with the most impassioned controversies concerning horses and horse-care, such as the introduction of the steam engine, popular new methods of horse-taming, debates over the tight-reining of horses, and the moral furor surrounding gambling at the race track. Her book establishes the centrality of the horse as a Victorian cultural icon and explores how through it, dominant ideologies of gender and class are created, promoted, and disrupted.
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