Record ID | harvard_bibliographic_metadata/ab.bib.13.20150123.full.mrc:830539418:3942 |
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LEADER: 03942cam a2200433Ii 4500
001 013751972-9
005 20131108190421.0
008 130708s2013 stka b 001 0 eng d
016 7 $a016453541$2Uk
020 $a9780748676071 (hbk.)
020 $a0748676074 (hbk.)
020 $z9780748676088 (webready PDF)
020 $z9780748676095 (epub)
035 0 $aocn856628427
040 $aNLE$beng$erda$cNLE$dOCLCO$dUKMGB$dYDXCP$dUAT$dVGM$dHEBIS$dMUU$dBDX$dZCU
043 $ae-uk-en
050 4 $aPR461$b.H93 2013
082 04 $a820.9358421081$223
100 1 $aHwang, Haewon,$eauthor.
245 10 $aLondon's underground spaces :$brepresenting the Victorian city, 1840-1915 /$cHaewon Hwang.
264 1 $aEdinburgh :$bEdinburgh University Press,$c[2013]
300 $axi, 235 pages :$billustrations ;$c24 cm.
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
338 $avolume$bnc$2rdacarrier
490 1 $aEdinburgh critical studies in Victorian culture
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 208-225) and index.
520 $a"The construction of London's underground sewers, underground railway and suburban cemeteries created seismic shifts in the geography and the psychological apprehension of the city. Yet, why are there so few literary and aesthetic interventions in Victorian representations of subterranean spaces? What is London's answer to the Parisian sewers of Victor Hugo or the unflinching realism of Émile Zola's underworld? Where is the great English underground novel? This study explores this elision not as an absence of imaginative output, but as a presence and plenitude of anxiety and fears that haunt the pages of Charles Dickens, George Gissing, Bram Stoker and Mary Elizabeth Braddon. The way in which these writers negotiated the dirt and messiness of underground spaces reveals both the emergence of Gothic, socialist, and modernist sensibilities, and the way all modern cities deal with what is unseen, intangible and inarticulable. The inclusion of illustrations of Victorian maps, cartoons, photographs and art bring the period to life."--Publisher's website.
505 0 $aIntroduction. Spatial Practices and Realignments ; Digging through the Layers ; Which Way to the Underground?. -- The Incontinent City: Sewers, Disgust and Liminality, The 'Great Unwashed' and the Incontinent City ; Literature of Filth/Visions of the Sublime ; Tainted Love: Prostitutes and Sexual Contagion ; Reading the Body of the Prostitute ; Imperial Impurities/Foreign Filth ; Embanking the Empire: Literature of Otherness ; Beyond Cleanliness. -- Tubing It: Speeding Through Modernity in the London Underground. Spatial Annihilation, Production and Representation ; Recuperating Meaning in the Underground ; Temporal Dislocations ; Failure and Psychological Disjunctions ; Disembarkation. -- The (Un)Buried Life: Death in the Modern Necropolis. The Disposal of the Dead: Shifting Attitudes towards the Corpse ; Geographies of the Dead ; Resurrection, Resurrectionists and the Revenant ; Feminine Resurrections and Spectral Dispossessions ; Underground Mourning, Memory and Memorabilia ; Final Exhumation. -- Underground Revolutions: Invisible Networks of Terror in Fin-de-Siècle London. Infernal Machines and Diabolical Plots ; 'Fenian Fire': Unfolding the Revolutionary Plot ; Middle-class Socialists and Anarchic Aristocrats ; Domesticating Terror ; Language of Rebellion/Performing Terror ; From Individual Action to Existential Inertia ; After the 'Revolution'... -- Conclusion.
651 7 $aLondon.$2gnd
650 7 $aUnterirdische Welt.$2gnd
650 0 $aEnglish literature$y19th century$xHistory and criticism.
650 0 $aUnderground areas in literature.
651 0 $aLondon (England)$xIn literature.
830 0 $aEdinburgh critical studies in Victorian culture.
899 $a415_565284
988 $a20130807
049 $aHLSS
906 $0OCLC