<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>This book examines the unexpected power of <i>dispassion</i> to incite the passions of sentimental literature, restoring the conversation between Enlightenment philosophy and fiction to the history of emotions, and reframing our contemporary theories of mind and of the novel.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>This book examines the unexpected power of <i>dispassion</i> to incite the passions of sentimental literature, restoring the conversation between Enlightenment philosophy and fiction to the history of emotions, and reframing our contemporary theories of mind and of the novel.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><i>Failures of Feeling</i> is an absorbing, challenging, and profound work....While it may be true that the narrative trajectories of most of the novels Lee discusses flirt with tragedy and irresolution, in her hands the beauty of these works shines more brightly than ever.--Adela Pinch "<i>Novel</i>"<br><br>A significant contribution to the study of both eighteenth-century philosophy and novel theory, <i>Failures of Feeling</i>--like its central figures--will no doubt generate significant response. It is the rare monograph that I feel the need--but also the willingness--to reread upon finishing, but I am certain that returning to Lee's text will only reveal new connections and depths.--Stephanie Insley Hershinow "<i>Eighteenth-Century Fiction </i>"<br><br>Arguing for the novel as a form provoked and sustained by the vexatious philosophical problem of insensibility, Wendy Lee anchors high theory in history, providing striking new readings of a wide range of canonical and lesser-known texts. Her elegant, witty, and sociable prose makes unfeeling endlessly engaging.--Helen Deutsch "University of California at Los Angeles"<br><br>In this stunningly original book, Wendy Anne Lee looks beyond the usual suspects in the history of the novel. A masterful stylist who navigates between wit and eloquence with admirable brio, she often made me laugh out loud--and almost made me weep.--Deidre Lynch "Harvard University"<br><br>Lee traces insensibility from 'the unlikely stock figure of the prude' to Austen's<i>Sense and Sensibility</i>and Melville's 'Bartleby, the Scrivener'--from Samuel Richardson's Clarissa Harlowe to George Eliot's Gwendolen Harleth. Along the way, she blends philosophical erudition and a series of razor-sharp readings with an uncommon wit that ratifies the absolute centrality of insensibility in the novel but also in the world...Essential.--J. Risinger, <i>CHOICE</i><br><br>Through her capacious research, masterful close readings, and exquisitely stylish prose, Wendy Anne Lee presents her readers with an enlightening study of the preeminent genre of fiction that the British Enlightenment would produce....she offers what is no less than a new way of reading the novel--a method that is as attuned to the expressiveness of silence as it is to profusive embodiments of emotion.--Kirstin M. Girten "<i>Modern Philology</i>"<br><br>Wendy Anne Lee makes me think about what we feel privately. Her brilliantly contrarian <i>Failures of Feeling: Insensibility and the Novel</i> looks at what happens when the answer is nothing....a dazzlingly original and irreverent monograph.--Jayne Lewis "<i>Studies in English Literature</i>"<br><br>Wendy Lee makes the bold, paradigm-shifting argument that <i>un</i>feeling is the heart--the inscrutable, insensible heart!--of the novel. She does so with bravura style and impressive range, producing a book that is both memorable and persuasive.--Sarah Kareem, University of California "Los Angeles"<br><br>Wendy Lee's book is an astonishing achievement. Not simply has she turned inside-out one of our deeply held beliefs about eighteenth-century literature and culture--that the novel is an exercise in cultivating and celebrating sensibility--but she has also presented us with a series of compelling new readings of some of the eighteenth century's most-read fictions....Each strikingly original chapter presents a new facet of the problem she investigates, never falling into the pattern of reiteration with new evidence, but instead, driving the argument further and deeper, nuancing her central contention in ways that continually surprise and amaze.--Rebecca Tierney-Hynes "<i>The Review of English Studies</i>"<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Wendy Anne Lee</b> is Assistant Professor of English at New York University.
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