Going Astray

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A01=Jeremy Tambling
Arcadian London
Author_Jeremy Tambling
BARNABY RUDGE
Betty Higden
Boiled Beef
Bradley Headstone
camden
Category=DS
Category=DSK
copperfield
cultural geography
david
Edwin Drood
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eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Furnival's Inn
Furnival’s Inn
Gray's Inn Road
Gray’s Inn Road
Greek Street
Jacob's Island
Jacob’s Island
James Street
Lady Dedlock
lant
lincolns
literary topography
Master Humphrey's Clock
Master Humphrey’s Clock
Miss Havisham
Miss Wade
modernity and representation
Mrs Clennam
narrative theory
nicholas
nickleby
nineteenth-century metropolis
Rich Goods
River Head
somers
Somers Town
spatial analysis in English literature
St George's Fields
St George’s Fields
St Martin's Lane
St Martin’s Lane
St Mary Le Strand
street
Tottenham Court Road
town
Uncommercial Traveller
Victorian urban studies
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138176690
  • Weight: 900g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Dec 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Among the numerous books on Dickenss London, Going Astray is unique in combining detailed topography and biography with close textual analysis and theoretically informed critiques of most of the novelists major works. In Jeremy Tamblings intriguing and illuminating synthesis, the London A-Z meets Nietzsche, Benjamin and Derrida. Rick Allen, author of The Moving Pageant: A Literary Sourcebook on London Street-Life, 1700-1914

Dickens wrote so insistently about London its streets, its people, its unknown areas that certain parts of the city are forever haunted by him. Going Astray: Dickens and London looks at the novelists delight in losing the self in the labyrinthine city and maps that interest, onto the compulsion to go astray in writing.

Drawing on all Dickens published writings (including the journalism but concentrating on the novels), Jeremy Tambling considers the authors kaleidoscopic characterisations of London: as prison and as legal centre; as the heart of empire and of traumatic memory; as the place of the uncanny; as an old curiosity shop. His study examines the relations between narrative and the city, and explores how the metropolis encapsulates the problems of modernity for Dickens as well as suggesting the limits of representation.

Combining contemporary literary and cultural theory with historical maps, photographs and contextual detail, Jeremy Tamblings book is an indispensable guide to Dickens, nineteenth- century literature, and the city itself.

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