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  • Comparative Literature - General and Comparative Literary Studies  (3)
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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Project MUSE ; 2021
    In:  Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature Vol. 40, No. 2 ( 2021), p. 425-427
    In: Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature, Project MUSE, Vol. 40, No. 2 ( 2021), p. 425-427
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 1936-1645
    Language: English
    Publisher: Project MUSE
    Publication Date: 2021
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2068468-X
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    University of California Press ; 2022
    In:  Nineteenth-Century Literature Vol. 76, No. 4 ( 2022-03-01), p. 455-490
    In: Nineteenth-Century Literature, University of California Press, Vol. 76, No. 4 ( 2022-03-01), p. 455-490
    Abstract: Ji Eun Lee, “Wooshing London: Unsettling Acceleration in H. G. Wells’s Tono-Bungay” (pp. 455–490) This essay reads H. G. Wells’s Tono-Bungay (1909) in the context of “wooshing” London—I take the word from the story—to see how the unsettling effect of this rapid urban mobility translates into the generic form of the novel. At the turn of the twentieth century, London was wooshing—that is to say, people and things in the city were moving by being displaced into a rushing flow, unprepared and unconnected, as the city was taken by revolutionary forms of urban transportation such as pneumatic and electric tubes, trams, elevators, escalators, motor buses, and cars. The word “woosh,” which was first used around the time that this mobility came into being, denotes a quick rushing movement based on hydraulic flow, and linguistically it functions as an interjection or a void in the semantic and syntactic flow of a sentence. Tono-Bungay shows different modes of unsettlement pervading London such as the whirlpool, passing stream, and flood. Yet it presents “woosh”—the way in which the patent medicine Tono-Bungay works and moves in commerce—as the ultimate mode of unsettlement that disconnects and displaces the locus of movement. Likewise, in Tono-Bungay, there is no locus of agency in the process of urban walking or in the reading process disrupting the narrative syntax. By emptying out the individual locus in the disconnecting, accelerating flow of his narrative—as London does in its urban mobility—Wells revises the genre into a form that embodies the city’s unsettling power.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0891-9356 , 1067-8352
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: University of California Press
    Publication Date: 2022
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2010832-1
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 232921-9
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2010833-3
    SSG: 7,25
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    University of Texas Press ; 2019
    In:  Texas Studies in Literature and Language Vol. 61, No. 3 ( 2019-09), p. 270-290
    In: Texas Studies in Literature and Language, University of Texas Press, Vol. 61, No. 3 ( 2019-09), p. 270-290
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0040-4691 , 1534-7303
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: University of Texas Press
    Publication Date: 2019
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2051594-7
    SSG: 7,24
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