Philanthropy in British and American Fiction avoids becoming simply yet another account of how nineteenth-century novelists, for all their sympathetic accounts of the poor, used their art for the consolidation of bourgeois hegemony, by making important claims about the parallels between philanthrophy and literary realism. Times Literary Supplement Christianson persuades us that the relationships among philanthropy, sentimentalism, realism, class, and professionalism are suggestive and worthy of sustained analysis. SEL - Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 Philanthropy in British and American Fiction avoids becoming simply yet another account of how nineteenth-century novelists, for all their sympathetic accounts of the poor, used their art for the consolidation of bourgeois hegemony, by making important claims about the parallels between philanthrophy and literary realism. Christianson persuades us that the relationships among philanthropy, sentimentalism, realism, class, and professionalism are suggestive and worthy of sustained analysis.