2016
DOI: 10.1017/s1060150315000625
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SUSPENSEFUL SPECULATION AND THE PLEASURE OF WAITING INLITTLE DORRIT

Abstract: “Suspend it all,” writes Charles Dickens in the ninth number plan for his novel Little Dorrit (“Working Notes” 207). Referring to the thirtieth chapter, in which Blandois – formerly Rigaud – arrives on the doorstep of Mrs. Clennam's house, this phrase aptly describes how much the chapter moves the plot forward. Mysteries are gestured toward, but the stakes of the mystery are left blank. Rigaud shows surprise upon seeing Flintwinch, but such surprise is inexplicable until we learn at the end of the novel that R… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
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