18th Century Today

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18th-century forms
18th-century narratives
actors
Adaptation
Beauty and the Beast
Belle
Black Sails
Bridgerton
Bright Star
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contemporary re-imaginings
cultural industries
cultural legacies
curators
Enlightenment
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film
gaming
genre
Harlots
heritage industries
historical fiction
history
industry interviews
inequality
injustice
modern perceptions
multidisciplinary
novelists
period drama
Popular culture
representation
television
The Great
The Revolutionists
values

Product details

  • ISBN 9781350528871
  • Weight: 540g
  • Dimensions: 154 x 236mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Dec 2025
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Exploring how 18th-century forms and narrative are taken-up, recycled and re-visioned in contemporary media, this book asks which histories are told and by whom. Through essays from international and multidisciplinary scholars and interviews with industry professionals, The 18th Century Today asks what function modern media performs when depicting the 18th century in our current world. Can such works speak to perceived 18th-century ideas and values and, simultaneously, the shifting paradigms of our own time? How, and why, should we engage?
Highlighting how contemporary depictions of the past give marginalised lives greater visibility, the role genre plays in re-enacting or re-interpreting 18th-century culture, and the potential for modern adaptation to transmute and transcend historical suffering, the essays in this volume dig into adaptation across theatre, film, prose fiction, television and games. Covering works such as The Great, Belle, Bridgerton and Black Sails among many others, this book is both reflection and celebration, an acknowledgement of the 18th century’s traumatic legacies alongside a sense of contemporary culture’s capacity for transformation, renewal and justice.

Madeleine Pelling is a cultural historian, author and award-winning broadcaster. She holds a PhD from the University of York, UK, and has held research fellowships at the universities of Yale, Edinburgh and Manchester. Her books include Writing on the Wall: Graffiti, Rebellion and the Making of Eighteenth-Century Britain (2024), Hoax: A History of Truth, Lies and Enlightenment (2026) and her words appear in The Guardian, The Telegraph, The Independent and BBC History Magazine. She is co-host of History Hit’s ARIA-nominated After Dark podcast, and is a regular presenter and expert contributor across television and radio, working with BBC, Channel 4, Sky Arts, Warner Bros, History Hit and Times Radio.

Emrys D. Jones is Senior Lecturer in 18th-Century Literature and Culture at King’s College, London, UK. He is the author of Friendship and Allegiance in Eighteenth-Century Literature (2013) and co-editor of essay collections about 18th-century celebrity and sociability. He has written articles and book chapters on a broad range of topics relating to intersections of public and private life in the long 18th century. He also hosted the podcast Pop Enlightenments (2017-2020) and is currently the General Editor of the Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies.