Vanity Fair
Material type:
TextPublication details: Hertfordshire Wordsworth Classics 2001ISBN: - 9781853260193
- 823.8
| Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
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MDIS Tashkent Learning Resource Center | MDIS Tashkent Learning Resource Center | Book;Fiction;Book Warehouse (LRC B) | 823.8 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | TKB033166 |
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| 823.8 Jane Eyre | 823.8 Jane Eyre | 823.8 Jane Eyre | 823.8 Vanity Fair | 823.8 David Copperfield | 823.83 Great expectations | 823.83 Martin Chuzzlewit |
Thackeray's upper-class Regency world is a noisy and jostling commercial fairground, predominantly driven by acquisitive greed and soulless materialism, in which the narrator himself plays a brilliantly versatile role as a serio-comic observer. Although subtitled A Novel without a Hero, Vanity Fair follows the fortunes of two contrasting but inter-linked lives: through the retiring Amelia Sedley and the brilliant Becky Sharp, Thackeray examines the position of women in an intensely exploitative male world. When Vanity Fair was published in 1848, Charlotte Brontë commented: 'The more I read Thackeray'sworks the more certain I am that he stands alone - alone in his sagacity, alone in his truth, alone in his feeling... Thackeray is a Titan.'
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