Writing London : the trace of the urban text from Blake to Dickens / Julian Wolfreys.

How did writers in the nineteenth century come to terms with the phenomenon of London, the world's largest and most rapidly expanding city? How did they perceive the 'modern Babylon' in all its excesses and chaos, and how did the rapid change and development of London affect or alter...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wolfreys, Julian, 1958-
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Basingstoke, Hampshire : New York : Macmillan Press ; St. Martin's Press, 1998.
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Online Access:Contributor biographical information
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Summary:How did writers in the nineteenth century come to terms with the phenomenon of London, the world's largest and most rapidly expanding city? How did they perceive the 'modern Babylon' in all its excesses and chaos, and how did the rapid change and development of London affect or alter their prose and poetry? Did London, in fact, help to shape modern literary conceptions and representations of urban space and its effects on our lives in cities, as city-dwellers?
These questions are raised in Writing London, which asks the reader to consider how writers in the first half of the nineteenth century sought to respond to the nature of London, a city quite unlike any other during this period. Drawing on literary theory, psychoanalysis and architectural theory, Julian Wolfreys looks at a variety of responses in poetry, fiction and autobiographical writing to consider the apocalyptic, the labyrinthine and the phobic modes of production among numerous reactions to the city.
Physical Description:xi, 249 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references (pages 238-246) and index.
ISBN:0333736869
9780333736869
0312214529
9780312214524
0333914295
9780333914298
023000895X
9780230008953