Vagrancy in the Victorian Age
Representing the Wandering Poor in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:26th Oct '23
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This paperback is available in another edition too:
- Hardback£75.00(9781316519851)
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This interdisciplinary study examines vagrancy in the Victorian era, exploring how societal views on poverty and mobility shaped cultural representations.
In Vagrancy in the Victorian Age, the author delves into the complex and multifaceted understanding of vagrancy during the nineteenth century. This interdisciplinary study reveals how Victorians perceived poverty, mobility, and homelessness, providing a comprehensive resource for both students and scholars interested in this pivotal era of literature and history. By examining the rich tapestry of cultural contexts, the book situates significant canonical texts alongside the social issues they reflect, offering a deeper understanding of the period.
Throughout Victorian culture, vagrants were a prominent presence, appearing in novels, newspapers, photographs, poems, and various forms of art. The book illustrates the diverse representations of vagrants, including Gypsies, hawkers, casual paupers, and vagabonds, who traversed both urban and rural landscapes. By uncovering the taxonomy of vagrancy, Vagrancy in the Victorian Age explores how societal assumptions regarding class, gender, race, and environment contributed to the creation of distinct vagrant types.
Moreover, the study highlights how conceptions of vagrancy evolved between rural and urban settings, particularly in colonial contexts. The author traces how representational strategies circulated both locally and globally, reflecting shifting societal anxieties and fantasies about mobility, poverty, and homelessness. This exploration of vagrancy is enriched by an extensive analysis of canonical, ephemeral, and popular texts, as well as various visual forms, making it a vital contribution to the understanding of Victorian society.
'… the first notable scholarly work to concentrate exclusively upon nineteenth-century representations of vagrancy - and as such is a highly welcome addition to the wider domain of vagrancy studies, which has so far generally failed to cover this area in detail … as well as offering a wide-ranging and clear account of some of the defining transitions in nineteenth-century attitudes towards vagrancy, alongside a nuanced analysis of how different authors responded to the figure of the vagrant, Vagrancy in the Victorian Age convincingly captures a sense of how attitudes towards vagrancy converged around adjacent prejudicial and subjugatory discourses, while simultaneously providing an opportunity for radical counter-trends to flourish.' Luke Lewin Davies, Journal of Victorian Culture Online
'… combines small details and considerable analysis to build a taxonomy that is structurally holistic and, often, really quite moving.' Delphine Gatehouse, BAVS Newsletter
'a first-rate account of the causes of poverty in the nineteenth century, the reasons for the rapid growth of London street life during this time, the blundering attempts to alleviate the misfortunes of the 'worthy' poor and the misguided urge to punish and reject those who were deemed unworthy.' Ana Alicia Garza, Times Literary Supplement
'… excellent … Robinson's book has set a very high benchmark for those that will undoubtedly follow in its wake.' Luke Seaber, Victorian Periodicals Review
'The meticulous research and nuanced discussion of vagrancy offered in Robinson's book thus adds to our understanding of Dickens's representations, while stimulating us to consider their significance further.' Tamara S. Wagner, Dickens Quarterly
'… elegantly written and fascinating … this book significantly adds to our understanding not only of nineteenth-century representations of poor people on the move but also of the mobilizations of those representations themselves.' Carolyn Betensky, Modern Language Quarterly
'… excellent … Robinson's book has set a very high benchmark for those that will undoubtedly follow in its wake.' Luke Seaber, Victorian Periodicals Review
'… a well-written and thought-provoking work, and one that in showing the protean and portable nature of the represented vagrant widens the subject in interesting ways …' Stephen Ridgwell, Journal of Victorian Culture
'… a first-rate account of the causes of poverty in the nineteenth century, the reasons for the rapid growth of London street life during this time, the blundering attempts to alleviate the misfortunes of the 'worthy' poor and the misguided urge to punish and reject those who were deemed unworthy … groundbreaking …' Ana Alicia Garza, The Times Literary Supplement
'… a detailed, critical, and historically informed engagement with the range of vagrancy in Victorian Britain and its empire - and the way in which these forms of vagrancy were understood, depicted, and also pressed into categories. … The meticulous research and nuanced discussion of vagrancy offered in Robinson's book thus adds to our understanding of Dickens's representations, while stimulating us to consider their significance further.' Tamara S. Wagner, Dickens Quarterly
ISBN: 9781009011242
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 15mm
Weight: 403g
275 pages