Dickens and Demolition: Literary Afterlives and Mid-Nineteenth-Century Urban Development

Author:   Joanna Hofer-Robinson
Publisher:   Edinburgh University Press
ISBN:  

9781474462730


Pages:   264
Publication Date:   31 May 2020
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
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Dickens and Demolition: Literary Afterlives and Mid-Nineteenth-Century Urban Development


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Author:   Joanna Hofer-Robinson
Publisher:   Edinburgh University Press
Imprint:   Edinburgh University Press
ISBN:  

9781474462730


ISBN 10:   1474462731
Pages:   264
Publication Date:   31 May 2020
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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Reviews

"Hofer-Robinson's analysis of these adaptations is particularly refreshing because she offers original close readings of the texts themselves rather than defaulting to an account of Dickens's reaction to his works being repurposed for the stage, a well-versed narrative.--Katie Holdway, University of Southampton ""Victorian Periodicals Review, Volume 53, Number 2, Summer 2020"" Dickens and Demolition shows how Dickens shaped London. Not only was the novelist actively involved in urban sanitation schemes, but his fictional depiction of London's most deprived areas helped to bring down buildings, and construct new streets. As Hofer-Robinson vividly demonstrates here, novels have afterlives, and literary tropes sometimes have decidedly material effects.-- ""Nicholas Daly, University College Dublin"" An important contribution to our understanding of Dickens's work and of Victorian London. Dickens and Demolition is profoundly and productively focused on the impact of fiction on the real, on the part literature has played in literally as well as discursively constructing the city. [...] Dickens and Demolition importantly reminds us how, all too often, society's most vulnerable exist only in haunting absences.--Sarah Bilston, Trinity College ""Victorian Studies"""


Hofer-Robinson's analysis of these adaptations is particularly refreshing because she offers original close readings of the texts themselves rather than defaulting to an account of Dickens's reaction to his works being repurposed for the stage, a well-versed narrative.--Katie Holdway, University of Southampton ""Victorian Periodicals Review, Volume 53, Number 2, Summer 2020"" Dickens and Demolition shows how Dickens shaped London. Not only was the novelist actively involved in urban sanitation schemes, but his fictional depiction of London's most deprived areas helped to bring down buildings, and construct new streets. As Hofer-Robinson vividly demonstrates here, novels have afterlives, and literary tropes sometimes have decidedly material effects.-- ""Nicholas Daly, University College Dublin"" An important contribution to our understanding of Dickens's work and of Victorian London. Dickens and Demolition is profoundly and productively focused on the impact of fiction on the real, on the part literature has played in literally as well as discursively constructing the city. [...] Dickens and Demolition importantly reminds us how, all too often, society's most vulnerable exist only in haunting absences.--Sarah Bilston, Trinity College ""Victorian Studies""


Author Information

Joanna Hofer-Robinson (née Robinson) is a lecturer in nineteenth-century literature at University College Cork. Joanna completed her doctorate at King's College London, where she held an AHRC Collaborative Doctoral Award, and then moved to University College Dublin to take up a postdoctoral fellowship funded by the Irish Research Council. With research interests in nineteenth-century literature and theatre, Joanna is Project Lead for a practice-led research project (Dickensian Drama), which has staged two rarely-performed plays.

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