Metropolitan Art and Literature, 1810–1840
Cockney Adventures
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:5th Mar '15
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
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This book explores Cockneyism's impact on art and literature between 1810 and 1840, linking the works of Keats and Dickens through cultural commentary.
In Metropolitan Art and Literature, 1810–1840, Gregory Dart delves into the complexities of Cockney identity during the late Romantic period. He expands upon traditional understandings of the 'Cockney School' by analyzing its broader implications in both art and periodical literature. Dart posits that Cockneyism transcended its initial association with the Leigh Hunt circle, evolving into a significant commentary on the discrepancies and disturbances prevalent in modern metropolitan life. This exploration reveals how Cockneyism served as a critical lens through which the artistic and literary productions of the time can be understood.
The author navigates the intricate relationship between Romanticism and Victorianism, presenting Cockneyism as a vital cultural currency that connects the works of key figures such as Leigh Hunt and John Keats in the 1810s to the early writings of Charles Dickens in the 1830s. Dart's analysis is comprehensive, drawing upon literary, art, urban, and social history to illustrate the emergence of the Cockney as a pivotal figure in the narrative of modernity. This book sheds light on how the Cockney phenomenon not only influenced contemporary art and literature but also became a symbol of the shifting dynamics of urban life.
Ultimately, Metropolitan Art and Literature, 1810–1840 offers a fresh perspective on the cultural landscape of early nineteenth-century London, emphasizing the significance of Cockneyism in shaping the artistic and literary movements of the time. Through meticulous research and insightful analysis, Dart provides readers with a deeper understanding of the connections between art, literature, and the evolving identity of the Cockney in a rapidly changing world.
'The venturesomeness of the book is in keeping with its subject, and the study often finds original ways to get topography and text to shed light on one another.' London Review of Books
'Challenges us to reconsider our prejudices about the prejudicial slur, 'Cockney' and to accord it the gravity of a significant genre.' The Times Literary Supplement
'… a fresh, wonderfully interesting, lucidly written book. Dart's style is a model of accessibility and is unceasingly engaging. He is a fine writer and [this book] is a testament to his wide-ranging abilities as a researcher and critic. This book reaches further into the Victorian period than the title suggests and is superb reading for anyone interested in Romantic and Victorian period cultures …an affectionate, interesting and generative study of Cockneyism, and how it engages with, among other things, architecture, art, city planning, fashion, literature, politics and suburban gardens. Dart's achievement is that he extends debates on Cockneyism out of the tight timeframe of 1812–20, that previous academic studies have largely held them in and, in doing so, expands the cultural spheres that Cockneys engaged with.' Journal of Victorian Culture
'Romanticists are familiar with the Cockney School attacks on the Leigh Hunt circle mounted by J. G. Lockhart in Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine beginning in 1817. Gregory Dart offers a fine-grained analysis of deployments of the term 'Cockney' after the attacks, and in so doing manages to cover a remarkable swathe of London's cultural landscape.' Thora Brylowe, BARS Bulletin and Review
'This is a bracingly adventurous book. Out of disparate materials, writers, and artists, Gregory Dart has constructed a previously unrecognized cultural period, the 'Cockney Moment' … the high accomplishment of this book is to make its eight-chapter study of the Cockney 'moment' continually clarifying and illuminating, historically innovative. The book not only bristles with fresh insights into the reach of the Cockney phenomenon across class and aesthetic as well as political lines, but also extends its complexity by effectively rethinking two decades of Romantic cultural production as central to a wider period of cultural transformation.' Jon Klancher, Review 19 (nbol-19.org)
'This well-illustrated, interesting, and very thorough book looks at the Cockney as emergent in London urban culture at the beginning of the nineteenth century. … Dart's book is an essential source for the culture of those very years.' Jeremy Tambling, Notes and Queries
ISBN: 9781107507746
Dimensions: 229mm x 150mm x 16mm
Weight: 500g
318 pages