ディケンズと速記Dickens and the Stenographic Mind

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ディケンズと速記Dickens and the Stenographic Mind

Bowles, Hugo

Oxford University Press 2019/01 発行
214 p. 36 illus.
装丁: HRD 装丁について
版表示など: HRD
テキストの言語: ENG 出版国: GB
ISBN: 9780198829072
KCN: 1032327420

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納期について
DDC:
823.8
KDC:
B235 イギリス・19世紀(ロマン派含む)

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Annotation

Explores how Dickens's use of shorthand influenced his writing and sheds light on a little known area of his working life.

Full Description

In this ground-breaking interdisciplinary study, Hugo Bowles tells the story of Dickens's stenographic journey from his early encounters with the 'despotic' shorthand symbols of Gurney's Brachygraphy in 1828 to his lifelong commitment to shorthand for reporting, letter writing, copying, and note-taking.

Detailed Information

Initially described by Dickens as a 'savage stenographic mystery', shorthand was to become an essential and influential part of his toolkit as a writer. In this ground-breaking interdisciplinary study, Hugo Bowles tells the story of Dickens's stenographic journey from his early encounters with the 'despotic' shorthand symbols of Gurney's Brachygraphy in 1828 to his lifelong commitment to shorthand for reporting, letter writing, copying, and note-taking.

Drawing on empirical evidence from Dickens's shorthand notebooks, Dickens and the Stenographic Mind forensically explores Dickens's unique ability to write in two graphic codes, offering an original critique of the impact of shorthand on Dickens's mental processing of language. The author uses insights from morphology, phonetics, and the psychology of reading to show how Dickens's biscriptal habits created a unique stenographic mindset that was then translated into novel forms of creative writing. The volume argues that these new scriptal arrangements, which include phonetic speech, stenographic patterns of letters in individual words, phonaesthemes, and literary representations of shorthand-related acts of reading and writing, created reading puzzles that bound Dickens and his readers together in a new form of stenographic literacy.

Clearly written and cogently argued, Dickens and the Stenographic Mind not only opens up new evidence from a little known area of Dickens's professional life to expert scrutiny, but is highly relevant to a number of important debates in Victorian studies including orality and literacy in the nineteenth century, the role of voice and voicing in Dickens's writing process, his relationship with his readers, and his various writing personae as law reporter, sketch-writer, journalist, and novelist.

Table of Contents

Prologue
1: Gurney and Sons
2: The Devil's Handwriting
3: Despotic Reading
4: The Stenographic Mind
5: Reporting
6: PKWK
7: Plays of the Pen
8: Stenographic Literacy
Epilogue

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