'The chapters in this collection demonstrate that the popular is definitely worth further critical scrutiny, with a careful eye on what might be added to the map, what might be deliberately or inadvertently left out, and to what purposes. Although neo-Victorian criticism never quite makes it out of its separate territory in Interventions, the book offers further evidence that Victorianists and neo-Victorianists pursue shared routes of critical investigation.'
Helen Davies, Newman University, Neo-Victorian Studies 10:2 (2018)
Andrew Smith is Professor of Nineteenth-Century English Literature at the University of Sheffield
Anna Barton is Senior Lecturer in Nineteenth-Century Literature at the University of Sheffield
Introduction - Andrew Smith and Anna Barton
Part I: Critical reflections
1 On measuring the nineteenth century - John Schad
2 Literature and science - David Amigoni
3 Locke in pentameters: Victorian poetry after (or before) posthumousness - Anna Barton
4 Reading the Gothic and Gothic readers - Andrew Smith
Part II: Rethinking national contexts and exchanges
5 The global circulation of Victorian actants and ideas: liberalism and liberalisation in the niche of nature, culture, and technology - Regenia Gagnier
6 Literary folk: writing popular culture in colonial Punjab, 1885-1905 - Churnjeet Mahn
7 'Across the waters of this disputed ocean': the material production of American literature in nineteenth-century Britain - Katie McGettigan
8 Gruesome models: European displays of natural history and anatomy and nineteenth-century literature - Laurence Talairach-Vielmas
Part III: Afterlives
9 Adaptive/appropriate reuse in neo-Victorian fiction: having one's cake and eating it too - Marie-Luise Kohlke
10 Populism and ideology: nineteenth-century fiction and the cinema - Richard J. Hand
11 True histories of the Elephant Man: storytelling and theatricality in adaptations of the life of Joseph Merrick - Benjamin Poore
Index