Sensation and Modernity in the 1860s
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:21st Nov '13
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
An account of literature and culture in the 1860s, examining popular and elite material prior to the 1867 Reform Act.
Offers an account of high and low literature and culture in the years leading up to the 1867 Reform Act. It argues that writers and artists re-evaluated their role as Britain moved towards democracy. Some embraced the crowd; some tried to escape from it; others tried to manipulate it.This book studies high and low culture in the years before the Reform Act of 1867, which vastly increased the number of voters in Victorian Britain. As many commentators worried about the political consequences of this 'Leap in the Dark', authors and artists began to re-evaluate their own role in a democratic society that was also becoming more urban and more anonymous. While some fantasized about ways of capturing and holding the attention of the masses, others preferred to make art and literature more exclusive, to shut out the crowd. One path led to 'Sensation'; the other to aestheticism, though there were also efforts to evade this opposition. This book examines the fiction, drama, fine art, and ephemeral forms of these years against the backdrop of Reform. Authors and artists studied include Wilkie Collins, Dion Boucicault, Charles Dickens, James McNeill Whistler, and the popular illustrator Alfred Concanen.
'… scholars will welcome Daly's work which opens up fields of thought and investigation in ways that usefully complicate the preconceptions and misconceptions surrounding the Victorian era.' http://res.oxfordjournals.org
ISBN: 9781107630208
Dimensions: 230mm x 153mm x 15mm
Weight: 390g
264 pages