A detailed and engaging exploration of a crucial transitional period between the Romantic and Victorian ages, this instalment covers a diverse range of literary and cultural forms to reimagine the 1830s, including within its ambit canonical figures such as Dickens and the Brontës alongside marginal voices from around the globe.
A detailed and engaging exploration of a crucial transitional period between the Romantic and Victorian ages, this instalment covers a diverse range of literary and cultural forms to reimagine the 1830s, including within its ambit canonical figures such as Dickens and the Brontës alongside marginal voices from around the globe.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Introduction John Gardner and David Stewart; 1. On the eve: William Benbow, Francis Macerone and the transmission of revolution John Gardner; 2. 'An infectious madness': disability and the epidemiology of social unrest in Dickens's Barnaby Rudge Essaka Joshua; 3. Augustus Hardin Beaumont, slavery apologias, and popular radical literature in the 1830s Tom Scriven; 4. Patterns of industry: Harriet Martineau's illustrated masculinities Valerie Sanders; 5. Mother Earth: gender and geology in the 1830s Adelene Buckland; 6. The polite fictions of slavery: British antislavery in the 1830s Juliet Shields; 7. Suffering, sentiment, and the rise of humanitarian literature in the 1830s Porscha Fermanis; 8. Steam and iron in the 1830s: liberal imperialism, Thomas Love Peacock, and the Nemesi Peter J. Kitson; 9. Lithography and the comic image 1825-1840 Brian Maidment; 10. Jorrocks's canon: Dickens, Surtees and 1830s print culture John Strachan; 11. Tennyson, Dickens, Poe, Browning, and the Brontës: Blackwood's Magazine and 'The foreheads of a new generation' Robert Morrison; 12. Boz in London: The 1830s and the urban turn in the English novel Sambudha Sen; 13. Letitia Elizabeth Landon, chronicler of the 1830s David Stewart; 14. Railway imaginary in the 1830s Nicola Kirkby: finding form; 15. The emerging language of photography Jennifer Green-Lewis; Afterword Richard Cronin.
Introduction John Gardner and David Stewart; 1. On the eve: William Benbow, Francis Macerone and the transmission of revolution John Gardner; 2. 'An infectious madness': disability and the epidemiology of social unrest in Dickens's Barnaby Rudge Essaka Joshua; 3. Augustus Hardin Beaumont, slavery apologias, and popular radical literature in the 1830s Tom Scriven; 4. Patterns of industry: Harriet Martineau's illustrated masculinities Valerie Sanders; 5. Mother Earth: gender and geology in the 1830s Adelene Buckland; 6. The polite fictions of slavery: British antislavery in the 1830s Juliet Shields; 7. Suffering, sentiment, and the rise of humanitarian literature in the 1830s Porscha Fermanis; 8. Steam and iron in the 1830s: liberal imperialism, Thomas Love Peacock, and the Nemesi Peter J. Kitson; 9. Lithography and the comic image 1825-1840 Brian Maidment; 10. Jorrocks's canon: Dickens, Surtees and 1830s print culture John Strachan; 11. Tennyson, Dickens, Poe, Browning, and the Brontës: Blackwood's Magazine and 'The foreheads of a new generation' Robert Morrison; 12. Boz in London: The 1830s and the urban turn in the English novel Sambudha Sen; 13. Letitia Elizabeth Landon, chronicler of the 1830s David Stewart; 14. Railway imaginary in the 1830s Nicola Kirkby: finding form; 15. The emerging language of photography Jennifer Green-Lewis; Afterword Richard Cronin.
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