ABSTRACT

At once an invitation and a provocation, The Socio-Literary Imaginary represents the first collection of essays to illuminate the historically and intellectually complex relationship between literary studies and sociology in nineteenth and early twentieth-century Britain. During the ongoing emergence of what Thomas Carlyle, in "Signs of the Times" (1829), pejoratively labeled a new "Mechanical Age," Britain’s robust tradition of social thought was transformed by professionalization, institutionalization, and the birth of modern disciplinary fields. Writers and thinkers most committed to an approach grounded in empirical data and inductive reasoning, such as Harriet Martineau and John Stuart Mill, positioned themselves in relation to French positivist Auguste Comte’s recent neologism "la  sociologie." Some Victorian and Edwardian novelists, George Eliot and John Galsworthy among them, became enthusiastic adopters of early sociological theory; others, including Charles Dickens and Ford Madox Ford, more  idiosyncratically both complemented and competed with the "systems of society" proposed by their social scientific contemporaries. Chronologically bound within the period from the 1830s through the 1920s, this volume expansively reconstructs their expansive if never collective efforts. Individual essays focus on Comte, Dickens, Eliot, Ford, and Galsworthy, as well as Friedrich Engels, Elizabeth Gaskell, G. H. Lewes, Virginia Woolf, and others. The volume's introduction locates these author-specific contributions in the context of both the international intellectual history of sociology in Britain through the First World War and the interanimating intersections of sociological and literary  theory from the work of Hippolyte Taine in the 1860s through the successive linguistic and digital turns of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries.

chapter |24 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|19 pages

“The Shortest Way Out of Manchester”

Literary Sociology, Sociological Literature, and the Substance Abuse Question

chapter 5|17 pages

World Making

Character as Goffmanian Co-presence in The Pickwick Papers and Our Mutual Friend

chapter 6|16 pages

Goffman Goes to Middlemarch

chapter 7|18 pages

Character and Life

Sociological Method in George Eliot’s Fiction

chapter 8|24 pages

Keeping Up Appearances

Criminality, Durkheim, and the Case of A. J. Raffles, Gentleman-Thief

chapter 9|20 pages

The Persistence of Social Groups

Georg Simmel and John Galsworthy

chapter 10|21 pages

“A More Emotional, a More Keenly Analytical Picture”

Impressionism, Naturalism, and Sociology in Ford Madox Ford