ABSTRACT

In Dickensian Affects: Charles Dickens and Feelings of Precarity, Joshua Gooch argues that Dickens’s novels offer models of feeling that illuminate the dissensions that accompany life’s precariousness under capitalism. By examining the role of violence, anxiety, surprise, and suspense in Dickens’s novels, Gooch explores how they represent and shape emotions to create rhythms specific to their historical moment. To unearth Dickensian affects, Gooch examines how some of Dickens’s novels yoke elements in their difference to signal different kinds and ways of feeling, what he terms affective form. This patterning of elements links a text’s ways of feeling to its conjuncture and locates lines of flight that allow its representations of emotion to become something else. The violence of Oliver Twist links its satire of the New Poor Law to the post-abolition period of apprenticeship in the West Indies. The pervasive anxiety of The Old Curiosity Shop links Nell’s journey to arguments economic inequality focused on questions of inheritance and land reform. The surprise of David Copperfield binds its interests in questions of character and trust to Britain’s professional world and credit markets. And the suspense of Great Expectations gestures toward a sense of shame and demand for new models of masculine character also seen in the Volunteer rifle militias. Dickensian Affects argues that for Dickens, questions of feeling reveal the precarity of feeling itself. For Dickens, to feel is to know the possibility of feeling otherwise.

chapter |29 pages

Introduction

What a Thing It Is to Have Power

chapter 1|33 pages

Toward a Theory of Affective Form

Sentimentality, Resonance, Rhythm

chapter 2|31 pages

Oliver Twist

Dependence, Violence, and Slavery

chapter 3|24 pages

The Old Curiosity Shop

Love, Anxiety, and Inheritance

chapter 4|35 pages

David Copperfield

Trust, Surprise, and the Call Loan System

chapter 5|35 pages

Great Expectations

Shame, ​Suspense, and the Volunteer Forces

chapter |18 pages

Conclusion

Dickensian Affects in the Future Tense