Literary Genre, Mode, and Style (original) (raw)
Genre and Style: Poetry
- Aesthetic Sense and Personal Sensibility in Nineteenth-Century Poetic Style
- The Dramatic Monologue
- First-person narrators, the dramatic monologue, and problems of interpretation
- The Victorian Long Poem
- The Epic
- How to Read a Poem
Fiction (1): Its Component Themes and Techniques
- Introduction: How to read a novel
- The Victorian Short Story: A Brief History
- Why Read the Serial Versions of Victorian Novels?
- Victorian Bestsellers, 1837-61
- Discussion Questions for Tillotson's Novels of the Eighteen-Forties
- Nostalgia and the Victorian Novel
- Characterization
- Imagery, Symbol, and Motif
- Plot and Narrative Structure
- The protagonist
- Aristotle's definition of a protagonist
- Carl Jung's Theory of the Effective Protagonist
- Plot versus Structure
- Setting
- Forms of Conflict
- [See also Pathetic Fallacy and Word-Painting above.]
Fiction (2): Genre and Style
- Buildungsroman
- Children's Literature
- The Clerical Novel
- The Victorian Governess Novel
- The Political Novel
- The Genre of the Political Novel
- Didacticism and the Political Novel
- Morris Edmund Speare on Inclusiveness in the Political Novel
- American vs. British Political Novels
- The Victorian Novel of Inter-class Romance
- The Victorian Social Novel as Genre
- Structure and Technique in the Victorian Political Novel
- The Detective Novel
- The Epistolary Novel
- The Sensation Novel
- Science Fiction
- The Silver Fork School
- Sex, Scandal, and the Novel
- Modes of novel publication: Serialization
- Free indirect speech and narrated consciousness — a bibliographical note
- Why all those blanks?
- The Utopian Novel
Modes
- Autobiography
- Allegory
- Comedy
- Fantasy
- The Grotesque
- Melodrama
- Realism
- Satire
- Suspense
- Sublimity
Genre and Style: Nonfiction
- General
- Autobiography
- the Essay
- Letters to the Editor
- Defending the Cultural Margins in 1860, or Drummed out of the Indian Army: The Case of Lt. Kennedy
- Sage Writing
- Art Criticism
- Victorian Art Criticism and the Rise of a Middle-Class Audience
- Victorian Art Criticism: Battling for the Minds of the Audience
- What Did Victorian Art Reviewers Do; or Where's The Criticism in Victorian Art Criticism?
- Ruskin in the Context of Victorian Art Criticism; or Why He Is So Good!
- Polemics and Theory — An Introduction to Ruskin's Art Criticism
Last modified 9 June 2011