Miller, D. A.

Novel and the police - London : University of California Press, 1989 - xv, 222 p. ; 21 cm

Includes bibliographical references and index.

With the appearance of D.A. Miller's remarkable book, the Victorian novel has its most dazzling critic in years. . . . Miller's subject is not so much the police in fiction as fiction and policing, narrative as a conservative function of the polis. Tracking diverse strategies of surveillance and incarceration into the confines of the fictional institution itself, Miller investigates Victorian novels as the often unconscious agent of a disciplinary culture. He thus reads fiction reading us, keeping a public in its private place. His mastery of an intricate, layered, and sinuous argument is stunning, the writing no less than superb. For all the book's overarching debt to Foucault, D.A. Miller 'do the police' in a voice all his own.

9780520067462


Political and social views
Bleak House
History and criticism
Police in literature
Victorian fiction
Detective

823.809355 / MIL

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