Chronometres
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English

About The Book

What does it mean to feel time to sense its passing along the sinews and nerves of the body as much as the synapses of the mind? And how do books as material arrangements of print and paper mediate such temporal experiences?<em> Chronometres: Devotional Literature Duration and Victorian</em> <em>Reading Culture</em> is a study of the time-inflected reading practices of religious literature the single largest market for print in Victorian Britain. It examines poetic cycles by John Keble Alfred Tennyson Christina Rossetti and Frances Ridley Havergal; family prayer manuals Sunday-reading books and periodicals; and devotional gift books and daily textbooks. Designed for diurnal and weekly reading chronometrical literature tuned its readers' attentions to the idea of eternity and the everlasting peace of spiritual transcendence but only in so far as it parcelled out reading into discrete increments that resembled the new industrial time-scales of factories and railway schedules. <em>Chronometres</em> thus takes up print culture affect theory and the religious turn in literary studies in order to explore the intersections between devotional practice and the condition of modernity. It argues that what defines Victorian devotional literature is the experience of its time signatures those structures of feeling associated with its reading durations. <p/>For many Victorians reading devotionally increasingly meant reading in regular portions and often according to the calendar and work-day in contrast to the liturgical year. Keeping pace with the temporal measures of modernity devotion became a routinized practice: a way of synchronizing the interior life of spirit with the exigencies of clock time. <em>Chronometres </em>considers how the deliverances afforded through time-scaled reading are persistently materialised in the body both that of the book and of the reader. Recognizing that literature and devotion are not timeless abstractions it asks how the materiality of books conceived as horological relationships through reading might bring about the felt experience of time. Even as Victorian devotion invites us to tarry over the page it also prompts the question: what if it is 'eternity' that keeps time with the clock?<br>
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