Conceiving the City

London, Literature, and Art 1870-1914

Nicholas Freeman author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:20th Sep '07

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Conceiving the City cover

Conceiving the City is an innovative study of the ways in which a generation of late-Victorian novelists, poets, painters, and theoreticians attempted to represent London in literature and art. Breaking away from the language and style of Dickens and the static panorama paintings of William Powell Frith, major figures such as Henry James and J. M. Whistler, and, crucially, less-celebrated authors such as Arthur Machen, Edwin Pugh, and George Egerton bent realism into exciting new shapes. In the naturalism of George Gissing and Arthur Morrison, the fragmentary impressions of Ford Madox Ford, and the brooding mystery of Alvin Langdon Coburn's photogravures, London emerged as a focus for dynamic, explicitly modern art. Although many of these insights would be dismissed or at least downplayed by subsequent generations, the ideas evolved during the period from 1870 to 1914 anticipate not only the work of high modernists such as Eliot and Woolf, but also that of later urban theorists such as Foucault and de Certeau, and the novels and travelogues of contemporary London writers Peter Ackroyd and Iain Sinclair. Nicholas Freeman recovers a sense of late-Victorian London as a subject for dynamic theoretical and aesthetic experiments, and shows, in stimulating analyses of Conan Doyle, H. G. Wells, Arthur Symons, and others how much of our understanding of urban space we owe to eminent (and not so eminent) Victorian figures. Written in a clear and accessible style, the book restores a much-needed historical perspective to our engagement with the metropolis.

Freeman's study is particularly effective...in exploring such larger movements in conceiving the city and analysing the complex interrelations between them. * Chris Louttit, Modern Language Review *
carefully argued...a thoughtful and valuable study * R. J Morris The Review of English Studies *
a valuable study, which paints an engaging historical portrait of London from the year of Dickens' death to the moments preceding the First World War

ISBN: 9780199218189

Dimensions: 239mm x 162mm x 19mm

Weight: 568g

256 pages