Essential
Reading
Brontë, Charlotte (2000), Villette.
Oxford
: OUP
Bulgakov, Mikhail (2007), A Dead Man’s Memoir: A Theatrical Novel.
London
: Penguin
Carter, Angela (1998), Nights at the Circus.
London
: Vintage.
DeLillo, Don (2001), The Body Artist.
London
: Picador.
Dickens, Charles (2003), Nicholas Nickleby.
London
: Penguin. Chapters 22-25, 30.
James, Henry (1995), The Tragic Muse.
London
: Penguin.
Waters, Sarah (1998), Tipping the Velvet.
London
: Virago.
Wilde, Oscar (2008), The Picture of Dorian Gray.
Oxford
: OUP.
Woolf, Virginia
(2008), Between the Acts.
Oxford
OUP.
West,, Nathaniel (2000) The Day of the Locust in The Day of the Locust and The Dream Life of Balso Snell.
London
: Penguin.
Secondary
Reading
Ames
, Christopher, ‘Carnivalesque Comedy in Between the Acts’, Twentieth-Century Literature 44 (1998), pp. 394-408
Auerbach, Nina (1990), Private Theatricals: The Lives of the Victorians.
Cambridge MA
. and London:
Harvard
University
Press.
Barnard, Rita, ‘"When You Wish Upon a Star": Fantasy, Experience, and Mass Culture in Nathanael West’, American Literature, 66 (1994), pp. 325-351
Barish, Jonas (1981), The Antitheatrical Prejudice. Berkeley:
University
of
California
Press.
Booth, Michael (1991), Theatre in the Victorian Age.
Cambridge
: CUP.
Bowen, John (2000), Other Dickens: Pickwick to Chuzzlewit.
Oxford
: OUP.
Boxall. Peter (2006), Don DeLillo: the possibility of fiction.
London
: Routledge.
Bratton, Jacky, ed. (1986) .Music Hall: Performance and Style.
Milton Keynes
: Open UP.
Brooker, Peter (1992), Modernism/ Postmodernism.
London
: Longman.
Brooks, Peter (1976), The Melodramatic Imagination: Balzac, Henry James, Melodrama, and the Mode of Excess.
New Haven
: Yale UP.
- (1993) Body Work: Objects of Desire in Modern Narrative.
Cambridge
MA.: Harvard UP.
Butler
, Christopher (2002) Postmodernism: A Very Short Introduction.
Oxford
: OUP
Butler
, Judith (1990), Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity.
London
: Routledge.
(1993), Bodies that Matter: On the Discursive Limits of “Sex”.
London
: Routledge
Case, Sue-Ellen, ed. (1990), Performing Feminisms: Feminist Critical Theory and Theatre. Baltimore and
London
: John Hopkins UP.
Carroll, Rachel, Return of the Century: Time, Modernity, and the End of History in Angela Carter's 'Nights at the Circus', The Yearbook of English Studies, 30 (2000), pp. 187-201
Davis, Tracy C. (1991), Actresses as Working Women: Their Social Identity in Victorian Culture.
London
: Routledge,
(2008) The
Cambridge
Companion to Performance Studies.
Cambridge
: CUP.
DiPrete, L., ‘‘Don DeLillo’s The Body Artist: Performing the Body, Narrating Trauma’’, Contemporary Literature 46 (2005), pp. 483–510.
Duvall, John (2008), The
Cambridge
Companion to Don DeLillo.
Cambridge
: CUP.
Farfan, Penny (2004), Women, Modernism and Performance.
Cambridge
: CUP.
Freedman, Jonathan (1998), The
Cambridge
Companion to Henry James.
Cambridge
: CUP.
Gale, Maggie and John Stokes, ed. (2007), The
Cambridge
Companion to the Actress.
Cambridge
: CUP
Garelick, Rhonda K. (1998), Rising Star: Dandyism, Gender and Performance in the Fin de Siecle. Princeton, NJ:
Princeton
University
Press, 1998.
Gilbert, Sandra and Susan Gubar (1979, 2000), The Madwoman in the Attic: the woman writer and the nineteenth-century literary imagination.
New Haven
: Yale UP
Glen, Heather, ed. (2002), The
Cambridge
Companion to the Brontës.
Cambridge
: CUP.
Gutleben, Christian (2001), Nostalgic Postmodernism: The Victorian Tradition and the Contemporary British Novel. Amsterdam &
New York
: Rodopi.
Guy Josephine and Ian Small (2000), Oscar Wilde’s Profession: Writing and the Culture Industry in the Late Nineteenth Century.
Oxford
: OUP.
Hutcheon, Linda (1996), A Poetics of Postmodernism: History, Theory, Fiction.
London
: Routledge.
Innes, Christopher (1992), Modern British Drama, 1890-1990.
Cambridge
: CUP.
Jordan, John O., ed. (2001), The
Cambridge
Companion to Dickens.
Cambridge
: CUP.
Kaplan, Cora (2007), Victoriana: Histories, Fictions, Criticism. Edinburgh:
Edinburgh
UP.
King, Jeanette (2005), The Victorian Woman Question in Contemporary Feminist Fiction.
Basingstoke
: Palgrave.
Kohlke, M.-L. ‘Into History through the Back Door: The “Past Historic” in Nights at the Circus and Affinity’, Women, 15:2 (2004), pp. 153-166.
Litvak Joseph (1982), Caught in the Act: Theatricality in the Nineteenth Century English Novel. Berkeley:
University
of
California
Press.
Luckhurst, Mary and Jane Moody, eds., (2005), Theatre and Celebrity in 1660–2000,
Basingstoke
: Palgrave Macmillan.
MacKay, Carol Hanbery, ed, (1989), Dramatic Dickens.
Basingstoke
: Macmillan
Marshall, Gail (1998), Actresses on the Victorian Stage: Feminine Performance and The Galatea Myth.
Cambridge
: CUP.
Maynard, John (1984), Charlotte Bronte and Victorian Sexuality.
Cambridge
: CUP.
Meisel, Martin (1983), Realizations: narrative, pictorial, and theatrical arts in nineteenth-century . Princeton:
Princeton
UP.
Parker, Andrew and Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, eds. (1995), Performativity and Performance.
New York
: Routledge.
Powell, Kerry (1990), Oscar Wilde and the Theatre of the 1890s.
Cambridge
: CUP.
Pullen, Kirsty (2005), Actresses and Whores: On Stage and in Society.
Cambridge
: CUP.
Raby, Peter (1997), The
Cambridge
Companion to Oscar Wilde.
Cambridge
: CUP
Rhodes, Chip (2008), Politics, Desire, and the
Hollywood
Novel. Iowa City: U of
Iowa
P.
Sage, Lorna, ed. (1988, repr 2001), Flesh and the Mirror: Essays on the Art of Angela Carter.
London
: Virago.
Schlicke, Paul (1985), Dickens and Popular Entertainment. London: Allen & Unwin.
Shaw, Margaret, ‘Narrative Surveillance and Social Control in Villette’, Studies in English Literature 1500-1900, 34 (1994), pp. 813-33.
Showalter, Elaine (1991), Sexual Anarchy: Gender and Culture at the fin de siècle.
New York
: Viking.
Shuttleworth, Sally (1996), Charlotte Bronte and Victorian Psychology.
Cambridge
: CUP.
Wheare, Jane (1989), Virginia Woolf: Dramatic Novelist.
London
: Macmillan.
Vlock, Deborah (1998), Dickens, novel reading, and the Victorian popular theatre.
Cambridge
: CUP.
Voskuil,
Lynn
(2004), Acting Naturally: Victorian Theatricality and Authenticity. Charlottesville and
London
: U of Virginia P.