Pleasures of Benthamism

£52.99

Pleasures of Benthamism

Victorian Literature, Utility, Political Economy

Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900 Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers Economic history Industrialisation and industrial history Social and political philosophy

Author: Kathleen Blake

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Language: English

Published by: OUP Oxford

Published on: 29th October 2009

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 16 Mb

ISBN: 9780191609800


Introduction

This book offers a fresh look at the often-censured but imperfectly understood traditions of Utilitarianism and political economy in their bearing for Victorian literature and culture. It treats writings by Jeremy Bentham, Adam Smith, Thomas Malthus, David Ricardo, James and John Stuart Mill, Charles Dickens, Thomas Carlyle, Anthony Trollope, George Eliot, Elizabeth Gaskell, and Rabindranath Tagore.

It sets texts in historical context, examines style as well asideas, and aims to widen awareness of commonalities across seemingly divided expressions of the age. A work of new economic criticism, it also treats Utilitarianism, close kin to political economy but even more poorly understood and poorly regarded. No other literary study addresses Bentham so fully.

The book further contributes to study of Victorian literature-and-liberalism and Victorian liberalism-and-imperialism. It challenges a high-cultural perspective and a perspective of ideology-critique that derive from F. R. Leavis and Michel Foucault and inform the prevailing idea of Victorian literature: as contender against the repressive mentality of Mr. Gradgrind, Dickens's caricature of a Smith-Benthamite; against the carceral social discipline of Bentham's Panopticon; and against the dismal science.

But utility has the happier meaning of pleasure. This study presents a capitalist, liberal age pursuing utility in commerce, industry, and socioeconomic/political reforms; favourable to freedom; and leveling as regards gender and class.

What about empire? A question not generally so squarely confronted in works on Victorian literature-and-economics and Victorian literature-and-liberalism. Shown here is the surprising extent to which liberalism develops as liberalism through liberal imperialism.

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