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Gossip

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Explores the nature, morality, and aesthetics of gossip, examines gossip in history and the psychology of gossip, and analyzes gossip--as subject and literary technique--in plays, letters, biographies, and novels

287 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1985

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78 people want to read

About the author

Patricia Meyer Spacks

40 books15 followers

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Paula.
189 reviews12 followers
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April 23, 2024
read for my dissertation
Profile Image for Madelyn.
766 reviews9 followers
December 1, 2022
Read four chapters of the book and the conclusion.

"Gossip gives voices to the dominated as well as the dominant; literature lets these voices be heard."
Profile Image for kaitlyn.
5 reviews
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May 17, 2023
read the first chapter at the pvd athenaeum. interesting! discusses Heidegger and Kierkegaard takes on gossip or “idle talk” and shortcomings in those thoughts due to time. particularly interested in the context about the advent of the novel as a literature format and how that made lots of both celebration and fear of “idle talk”
Profile Image for Leslie.
960 reviews93 followers
June 28, 2017
A smart and interesting examination of the intersection between gossip--conversation about people and their doings, speculation about private lives and motives--and texts, including biography and autobiography, the publishing and reading of private letters and journals, drama, and fiction. Spacks examones both gossip as subject matter (characters who engage in gossip, who fear gossip, whose lives are affected by gossip) and gossip as analogue for our relationship to stories and our activities as readers. Close readings of lots of texts from this standpoint, including Mary Wortley Montague, Austen, Samuel Johnson, Boswell, Thackeray, Sheridan, George Eliot, Wharton, Henry James, Anthony Trollope, Frances Burney, Emily Bronte.
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