James Gatheral
The Bohemian Republic (eBook, PDF)
Transnational Literary Networks in the Nineteenth Century
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James Gatheral
The Bohemian Republic (eBook, PDF)
Transnational Literary Networks in the Nineteenth Century
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Focusing on networks and borders as the central modes of analysis, this book charts for the first time Bohemia's cross-Channel, transatlantic, and trans-Pacific migrations, locating its creative expressions and social practices within a global context of ideas and action.
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Focusing on networks and borders as the central modes of analysis, this book charts for the first time Bohemia's cross-Channel, transatlantic, and trans-Pacific migrations, locating its creative expressions and social practices within a global context of ideas and action.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. November 2020
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781000226577
- Artikelnr.: 60216835
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. November 2020
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781000226577
- Artikelnr.: 60216835
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
James Gatheral is a scholar of nineteenth century literature and popular culture. He is currently investigating the world of cultural Bohemia, the nineteenth century's most notorious subculture.
Chapter 1 The Bohemian Republic: An Introduction
* The Bohemian and the Bohémien
* Timelines
* New Perspectives on Bohemia
* Borders, Mobilities, and Networks
* Scope
Chapter 2 Paris and the Birth of Bohemia
* La bohème littéraire et la Petite Presse
* Scènes de la vie de bohème
* Communal Living in Bohemia: the Garret, the Atelier, and the
Phalanstère
* Hotel Corneille: "The Great Bohemian Resort"
* Bohemia and the Life of the Café
* Madame Busque's
* The Bohemian Ball and the Demi-Monde
* Women in Bohemia: The Grisette
* Commercial Bohemia
* At the Café Concert
* Women in Bohemia: Mimi and Musette
* The Princess of Bohemia
* The Street
* 'Echo Chambers': Paris and London
* Revolution
Chapter 3 London Bohemia
* London's Underground Bohemia
* Fictions of London Bohemia
* Bagot's Youth and the Bohemian 'Comic Epoch'
* 'Philosophers of the Cyder Cellar': the Comic Epoch Onstage
* Gavarni in London: Anglicising a Parisian Bohemian
* Bohemian Slumming in London
* The Birth of a Bohemia on Fleet Street
* The Bohemian Symposium: Table Talk and Bohemian Print Culture
* Anglicising the Bohemienne
* Therese Desprez and the Foreignness of the Bohemienne
* Brough and the Bohemian Girl
* Fast London
* Camaralzaman and Badoura
* Anglicising the Grisette and the Bohemienne in Fast London
* London Bohemia and the Carnival
* The Women in West End Bohemia
* Mary Braddon: An Undercover Bohemienne in London
* Friends of Bohemia and the Politics of Bohemian Clubland
* The Governing Classes
* Savages and Tumblers in Clubland: The Idler versus The Train
* Upper and Lower Bohemia in Bagot's Youth and Marston Lynch
* Bohemia Petraea
* Suffering in Lower Bohemia
* Lotus-Eating in Upper Bohemia
* The Limits of Bohemia
* Forty Thieves and London Bohemia's Apotheosis: From the Shadows into
the Spotlight
* Seeking the patronage of Anti-Bohemia
Chapter 4 New York Bohemia
* Transatlantic Bohemianism: The Lanternites and the "cross of cockney
blood"
* The Bohemian Press
* The Physiology of New York Boarding-Houses
* "Slaves of the Lamp"
* The Oyster Critics
* The Ornithorhynchus Club
* The New World and the Infinite Republic
* Suicide in Bohemia
* A Bohemian Utopia
* The Boarding-house: Low Living and High Thinking
* 'Free Love' and Bohemia
* Young New York: Bohemianism on Broadway
* Proclaiming New York Bohemia
* Harper's 'Bohemien'
* 'At Pfaff's'
* The Capital of Bohemia and the Magic Circle
* The Independent Organ of Bohemia
* Portraits of Paris and London
* The New York Leader
* Bohemiana
* "Pretty modern literary women"
* A Bohemian Civil War
* The Bohemian Brigade
* Death and Desertion
Chapter 5 Melbourne Bohemia
* A City of Gold and a Penal Colony: Bohemian Visions of Australia
* "You would lead the colony-you would create a better Ireland
there-you would become rich ..."
* London's Bohemian Legacy
* Colonial Networks and Cultural Transfer
* Reinventing Fast London
* Reinventing the West End
* A Bohemian University Student
* Brough and Australia's "Bohemian demi-monde"
* The Ghosts of Bohemia
* Colonial Print Culture: "Picturing Home"
* Writing Home
* The Melbourne Press: Where "literature takes its proper rank"
* Arriving at Austin Friars
* Bohemian Café Culture in Bourke Street
* The Yorick Club: Native Companions and Savages
* Upper Bohemia Down Under
* A Bohemian Reader
* Marcus Clarke's Library
* Lower Bohemia Down Under
* The Gypsies of the Sea
Chapter 6 Conclusion
* The Bohemian and the Bohémien
* Timelines
* New Perspectives on Bohemia
* Borders, Mobilities, and Networks
* Scope
Chapter 2 Paris and the Birth of Bohemia
* La bohème littéraire et la Petite Presse
* Scènes de la vie de bohème
* Communal Living in Bohemia: the Garret, the Atelier, and the
Phalanstère
* Hotel Corneille: "The Great Bohemian Resort"
* Bohemia and the Life of the Café
* Madame Busque's
* The Bohemian Ball and the Demi-Monde
* Women in Bohemia: The Grisette
* Commercial Bohemia
* At the Café Concert
* Women in Bohemia: Mimi and Musette
* The Princess of Bohemia
* The Street
* 'Echo Chambers': Paris and London
* Revolution
Chapter 3 London Bohemia
* London's Underground Bohemia
* Fictions of London Bohemia
* Bagot's Youth and the Bohemian 'Comic Epoch'
* 'Philosophers of the Cyder Cellar': the Comic Epoch Onstage
* Gavarni in London: Anglicising a Parisian Bohemian
* Bohemian Slumming in London
* The Birth of a Bohemia on Fleet Street
* The Bohemian Symposium: Table Talk and Bohemian Print Culture
* Anglicising the Bohemienne
* Therese Desprez and the Foreignness of the Bohemienne
* Brough and the Bohemian Girl
* Fast London
* Camaralzaman and Badoura
* Anglicising the Grisette and the Bohemienne in Fast London
* London Bohemia and the Carnival
* The Women in West End Bohemia
* Mary Braddon: An Undercover Bohemienne in London
* Friends of Bohemia and the Politics of Bohemian Clubland
* The Governing Classes
* Savages and Tumblers in Clubland: The Idler versus The Train
* Upper and Lower Bohemia in Bagot's Youth and Marston Lynch
* Bohemia Petraea
* Suffering in Lower Bohemia
* Lotus-Eating in Upper Bohemia
* The Limits of Bohemia
* Forty Thieves and London Bohemia's Apotheosis: From the Shadows into
the Spotlight
* Seeking the patronage of Anti-Bohemia
Chapter 4 New York Bohemia
* Transatlantic Bohemianism: The Lanternites and the "cross of cockney
blood"
* The Bohemian Press
* The Physiology of New York Boarding-Houses
* "Slaves of the Lamp"
* The Oyster Critics
* The Ornithorhynchus Club
* The New World and the Infinite Republic
* Suicide in Bohemia
* A Bohemian Utopia
* The Boarding-house: Low Living and High Thinking
* 'Free Love' and Bohemia
* Young New York: Bohemianism on Broadway
* Proclaiming New York Bohemia
* Harper's 'Bohemien'
* 'At Pfaff's'
* The Capital of Bohemia and the Magic Circle
* The Independent Organ of Bohemia
* Portraits of Paris and London
* The New York Leader
* Bohemiana
* "Pretty modern literary women"
* A Bohemian Civil War
* The Bohemian Brigade
* Death and Desertion
Chapter 5 Melbourne Bohemia
* A City of Gold and a Penal Colony: Bohemian Visions of Australia
* "You would lead the colony-you would create a better Ireland
there-you would become rich ..."
* London's Bohemian Legacy
* Colonial Networks and Cultural Transfer
* Reinventing Fast London
* Reinventing the West End
* A Bohemian University Student
* Brough and Australia's "Bohemian demi-monde"
* The Ghosts of Bohemia
* Colonial Print Culture: "Picturing Home"
* Writing Home
* The Melbourne Press: Where "literature takes its proper rank"
* Arriving at Austin Friars
* Bohemian Café Culture in Bourke Street
* The Yorick Club: Native Companions and Savages
* Upper Bohemia Down Under
* A Bohemian Reader
* Marcus Clarke's Library
* Lower Bohemia Down Under
* The Gypsies of the Sea
Chapter 6 Conclusion
Chapter 1 The Bohemian Republic: An Introduction
* The Bohemian and the Bohémien
* Timelines
* New Perspectives on Bohemia
* Borders, Mobilities, and Networks
* Scope
Chapter 2 Paris and the Birth of Bohemia
* La bohème littéraire et la Petite Presse
* Scènes de la vie de bohème
* Communal Living in Bohemia: the Garret, the Atelier, and the
Phalanstère
* Hotel Corneille: "The Great Bohemian Resort"
* Bohemia and the Life of the Café
* Madame Busque's
* The Bohemian Ball and the Demi-Monde
* Women in Bohemia: The Grisette
* Commercial Bohemia
* At the Café Concert
* Women in Bohemia: Mimi and Musette
* The Princess of Bohemia
* The Street
* 'Echo Chambers': Paris and London
* Revolution
Chapter 3 London Bohemia
* London's Underground Bohemia
* Fictions of London Bohemia
* Bagot's Youth and the Bohemian 'Comic Epoch'
* 'Philosophers of the Cyder Cellar': the Comic Epoch Onstage
* Gavarni in London: Anglicising a Parisian Bohemian
* Bohemian Slumming in London
* The Birth of a Bohemia on Fleet Street
* The Bohemian Symposium: Table Talk and Bohemian Print Culture
* Anglicising the Bohemienne
* Therese Desprez and the Foreignness of the Bohemienne
* Brough and the Bohemian Girl
* Fast London
* Camaralzaman and Badoura
* Anglicising the Grisette and the Bohemienne in Fast London
* London Bohemia and the Carnival
* The Women in West End Bohemia
* Mary Braddon: An Undercover Bohemienne in London
* Friends of Bohemia and the Politics of Bohemian Clubland
* The Governing Classes
* Savages and Tumblers in Clubland: The Idler versus The Train
* Upper and Lower Bohemia in Bagot's Youth and Marston Lynch
* Bohemia Petraea
* Suffering in Lower Bohemia
* Lotus-Eating in Upper Bohemia
* The Limits of Bohemia
* Forty Thieves and London Bohemia's Apotheosis: From the Shadows into
the Spotlight
* Seeking the patronage of Anti-Bohemia
Chapter 4 New York Bohemia
* Transatlantic Bohemianism: The Lanternites and the "cross of cockney
blood"
* The Bohemian Press
* The Physiology of New York Boarding-Houses
* "Slaves of the Lamp"
* The Oyster Critics
* The Ornithorhynchus Club
* The New World and the Infinite Republic
* Suicide in Bohemia
* A Bohemian Utopia
* The Boarding-house: Low Living and High Thinking
* 'Free Love' and Bohemia
* Young New York: Bohemianism on Broadway
* Proclaiming New York Bohemia
* Harper's 'Bohemien'
* 'At Pfaff's'
* The Capital of Bohemia and the Magic Circle
* The Independent Organ of Bohemia
* Portraits of Paris and London
* The New York Leader
* Bohemiana
* "Pretty modern literary women"
* A Bohemian Civil War
* The Bohemian Brigade
* Death and Desertion
Chapter 5 Melbourne Bohemia
* A City of Gold and a Penal Colony: Bohemian Visions of Australia
* "You would lead the colony-you would create a better Ireland
there-you would become rich ..."
* London's Bohemian Legacy
* Colonial Networks and Cultural Transfer
* Reinventing Fast London
* Reinventing the West End
* A Bohemian University Student
* Brough and Australia's "Bohemian demi-monde"
* The Ghosts of Bohemia
* Colonial Print Culture: "Picturing Home"
* Writing Home
* The Melbourne Press: Where "literature takes its proper rank"
* Arriving at Austin Friars
* Bohemian Café Culture in Bourke Street
* The Yorick Club: Native Companions and Savages
* Upper Bohemia Down Under
* A Bohemian Reader
* Marcus Clarke's Library
* Lower Bohemia Down Under
* The Gypsies of the Sea
Chapter 6 Conclusion
* The Bohemian and the Bohémien
* Timelines
* New Perspectives on Bohemia
* Borders, Mobilities, and Networks
* Scope
Chapter 2 Paris and the Birth of Bohemia
* La bohème littéraire et la Petite Presse
* Scènes de la vie de bohème
* Communal Living in Bohemia: the Garret, the Atelier, and the
Phalanstère
* Hotel Corneille: "The Great Bohemian Resort"
* Bohemia and the Life of the Café
* Madame Busque's
* The Bohemian Ball and the Demi-Monde
* Women in Bohemia: The Grisette
* Commercial Bohemia
* At the Café Concert
* Women in Bohemia: Mimi and Musette
* The Princess of Bohemia
* The Street
* 'Echo Chambers': Paris and London
* Revolution
Chapter 3 London Bohemia
* London's Underground Bohemia
* Fictions of London Bohemia
* Bagot's Youth and the Bohemian 'Comic Epoch'
* 'Philosophers of the Cyder Cellar': the Comic Epoch Onstage
* Gavarni in London: Anglicising a Parisian Bohemian
* Bohemian Slumming in London
* The Birth of a Bohemia on Fleet Street
* The Bohemian Symposium: Table Talk and Bohemian Print Culture
* Anglicising the Bohemienne
* Therese Desprez and the Foreignness of the Bohemienne
* Brough and the Bohemian Girl
* Fast London
* Camaralzaman and Badoura
* Anglicising the Grisette and the Bohemienne in Fast London
* London Bohemia and the Carnival
* The Women in West End Bohemia
* Mary Braddon: An Undercover Bohemienne in London
* Friends of Bohemia and the Politics of Bohemian Clubland
* The Governing Classes
* Savages and Tumblers in Clubland: The Idler versus The Train
* Upper and Lower Bohemia in Bagot's Youth and Marston Lynch
* Bohemia Petraea
* Suffering in Lower Bohemia
* Lotus-Eating in Upper Bohemia
* The Limits of Bohemia
* Forty Thieves and London Bohemia's Apotheosis: From the Shadows into
the Spotlight
* Seeking the patronage of Anti-Bohemia
Chapter 4 New York Bohemia
* Transatlantic Bohemianism: The Lanternites and the "cross of cockney
blood"
* The Bohemian Press
* The Physiology of New York Boarding-Houses
* "Slaves of the Lamp"
* The Oyster Critics
* The Ornithorhynchus Club
* The New World and the Infinite Republic
* Suicide in Bohemia
* A Bohemian Utopia
* The Boarding-house: Low Living and High Thinking
* 'Free Love' and Bohemia
* Young New York: Bohemianism on Broadway
* Proclaiming New York Bohemia
* Harper's 'Bohemien'
* 'At Pfaff's'
* The Capital of Bohemia and the Magic Circle
* The Independent Organ of Bohemia
* Portraits of Paris and London
* The New York Leader
* Bohemiana
* "Pretty modern literary women"
* A Bohemian Civil War
* The Bohemian Brigade
* Death and Desertion
Chapter 5 Melbourne Bohemia
* A City of Gold and a Penal Colony: Bohemian Visions of Australia
* "You would lead the colony-you would create a better Ireland
there-you would become rich ..."
* London's Bohemian Legacy
* Colonial Networks and Cultural Transfer
* Reinventing Fast London
* Reinventing the West End
* A Bohemian University Student
* Brough and Australia's "Bohemian demi-monde"
* The Ghosts of Bohemia
* Colonial Print Culture: "Picturing Home"
* Writing Home
* The Melbourne Press: Where "literature takes its proper rank"
* Arriving at Austin Friars
* Bohemian Café Culture in Bourke Street
* The Yorick Club: Native Companions and Savages
* Upper Bohemia Down Under
* A Bohemian Reader
* Marcus Clarke's Library
* Lower Bohemia Down Under
* The Gypsies of the Sea
Chapter 6 Conclusion