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Margins of Desire Lynne Hapgood

Margins of Desire par Lynne Hapgood

Margins of Desire Lynne Hapgood


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Résumé

Who said that the suburbs are boring? The suburban trick is to look ordinary and be extraordinary, as Lynne Hapgood's absorbing discussion of the suburbs in fiction from 1880-1925 reveals.

Margins of Desire Résumé

Margins of Desire: The Suburbs in Fiction and Culture 1880-1925 Lynne Hapgood

Margins of Desire' turns the critical spotlight on the London suburbs by showing how the expanding city created new literary locations, genres and themes between 1880 and 1925. Drawing on a wide range of writings, the book considers not only the fiction that identified the suburbs as significant but also the fiction that suburban dwellers, particularly women, wrote and read for themselves. Pervasive suburban themes included the loss of the rural, the rejection of the urban, the feminisation of culture and changing class identities. By engaging with modernity as represented by the suburbs, such writing was subversive of literary tradition and value, and signalled a shift towards the idea of the ordinary, the accessible and the harmonious. The suburbanisation of the literary imagination is addressed through studies of suburban and anti-suburban utopias by writers such as William Morris, E.M. Forster, Jerome K. Jerome and Arthur Conan Doyle; the imaginative terrain created by women writers in magazine and popular fiction, and representation of suburban realities from George Gissing's attacks on mediocrity to G.K. Chesterton's celebration of the ordinary. Lynne Hapgood's lively approach opens up a counter-culture to modernist metropolitanism and argues for a more inclusive understanding of the fiction of the period.

Margins of Desire Avis

'This is of considerable contextual value to the Bennett scholar. Her analysis of Bullock's Robert Thorne (1907), the story of a clerk and his search for a proper identity, makes a fascinating coda to Bennet's A Man From the North. (1898) One of the joys of Hapgood's study is her ability to disturb his perceived tranquil sociological view of suburbia with a reasoned argument for seeing A Man From the North as a more savage text that George Gissing's New Grub Street.' John Shapcott

À propos de Lynne Hapgood

Lynne Hapgood is Reader in English at Nottingham Trent University

Sommaire

List of illustrations Acknowledgements Introduction - The defining suburb Part I Suburban visions 1. The utopian suburb: Jerome K. Jerome, William Morris and 'the logical dream' 2. The suburban idyll: Arthur Conan Doyle, Keble Howard, John Galsworthy 3. Beyond the suburbs: Richard Jefferies, Edward Thomas, E.M. Forster Part II Suburban dreams 4. The suburban garden: Elizabeth von Arnim and the garden romances 5. The feminine suburb I: Women readers and romance fiction 6. The feminine suburb II: Louise Gerard, Sophie Cole, Alice Askew, Mary Hamilton Part III Suburban realities 7. The working-class suburb: William Pett Ridge, Shan Bullock, Edwin Pugh 8. The suburban cul-de-sac: George Gissing and H.G. Wells 9. The suburban extraordinary: Arnold Bennett and G.K. Chesterton Suburban fiction: A publication timeline Select bibliography

Informations supplémentaires

GOR013502950
9780719059711
0719059712
Margins of Desire: The Suburbs in Fiction and Culture 1880-1925 Lynne Hapgood
Occasion - Très bon état
Broché
Manchester University Press
2009-11-01
272
N/A
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