Meeting Without Knowing It: Kipling and Yeats at the Fin de Siècle

Awards:   Winner of Winner of the University English Book Prize.
Author:   Alexander Bubb (Leverhulme Early Career Fellow, Leverhulme Early Career Fellow, King's College, London)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780198753872


Pages:   290
Publication Date:   11 February 2016
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Meeting Without Knowing It: Kipling and Yeats at the Fin de Siècle


Awards

  • Winner of Winner of the University English Book Prize.

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Alexander Bubb (Leverhulme Early Career Fellow, Leverhulme Early Career Fellow, King's College, London)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 14.50cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 22.30cm
Weight:   0.467kg
ISBN:  

9780198753872


ISBN 10:   019875387
Pages:   290
Publication Date:   11 February 2016
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1: 'We Shall Go Back' Childhoods Lived and Relived 2: Returns, 1881-1886 3: Threshold Figures, 1887-1890 4: Arrival: Negotiating the Literary World of Fin de Siècle London 5: Plotting and Scheming: Experiments Toward a Modern Mythology 6: Authority, 1896-1906 Coda Appendix: Parallel Chronology Bibliography

Reviews

a fascinating analysis of literary interaction that firmly situates its subjects in their British, Irish, and Indian contexts. By looking at the underlying connections between Kipling and Yeats, Bubb provides an original and engaging reading of fin-de-siecle interaction. * Joseph Thorne, Liverpool John Moores University, British Association of Victorian Studies newsletter * Meeting Without Knowing It is a meticulously phrased and engaging study of Kipling's and Yeats's transitional narratives, which raises questions not only about their reception histories, canonical divisions and patterns of mutual exchange, but also about generic strategies of confronting the fragmentation of metropolitan living with the imagined unity of peripheral homes lost and remembered. * Forum for Modern Language Studies * It is easy to recommend this painstaking analysis and detailed use of sources in pursuing the 'submerged relationship'. * Jad Adams, Yeats Annual * Alexander Bubb's innovative handling of the lives and work of Rudyard Kipling and W. B. Yeats looks set to blaze a trail in literary biography. * Kathy Rees, Notes and Queries * Meeting Without Knowing It is a rich and original study of the cultural nexus that was the fin de siecle. It takes the provocative but productive step of proceeding through an extended comparison of the lives and careers of Rudyard Kipling and W.B. Yeats, from 1865 to 1906. * David Sergeant, Journal of Postcolonial Writing * a rich and rewarding study of both writers, which succeeds in showing how their affiliations, writings and beliefs reflected and refracted one another. * Jan Montefiore, Times Literary Supplement * ... a concise, ingenious, scholarly, dense, and illuminating double biographical study. * John Batchelor, The Modern Language Review * Highlighting the underacknowledged yet evidently important dynamic between Yeats and Kipling in their capacities as authors and public figures, this monograph is rich in content and expression, and is a welcome addition to the study of Yeats and Kipling as part of the intricate fabric of fin de siecle cultural production. * Ragini Mohite, International Yeats *


Highlighting the underacknowledged yet evidently important dynamic between Yeats and Kipling in their capacities as authors and public figures, this monograph is rich in content and expression, and is a welcome addition to the study of Yeats and Kipling as part of the intricate fabric of fin de siecle cultural production. * Ragini Mohite, International Yeats * ... a concise, ingenious, scholarly, dense, and illuminating double biographical study. * John Batchelor, The Modern Language Review * a rich and rewarding study of both writers, which succeeds in showing how their affiliations, writings and beliefs reflected and refracted one another. * Jan Montefiore, Times Literary Supplement * Meeting Without Knowing It is a rich and original study of the cultural nexus that was the fin de siecle. It takes the provocative but productive step of proceeding through an extended comparison of the lives and careers of Rudyard Kipling and W.B. Yeats, from 1865 to 1906. * David Sergeant, Journal of Postcolonial Writing * Alexander Bubb's innovative handling of the lives and work of Rudyard Kipling and W. B. Yeats looks set to blaze a trail in literary biography. * Kathy Rees, Notes and Queries * It is easy to recommend this painstaking analysis and detailed use of sources in pursuing the 'submerged relationship'. * Jad Adams, Yeats Annual * Meeting Without Knowing It is a meticulously phrased and engaging study of Kipling's and Yeats's transitional narratives, which raises questions not only about their reception histories, canonical divisions and patterns of mutual exchange, but also about generic strategies of confronting the fragmentation of metropolitan living with the imagined unity of peripheral homes lost and remembered. * Forum for Modern Language Studies *


a rich and rewarding study of both writers, which succeeds in showing how their affiliations, writings and beliefs reflected and refracted one another. Jan Montefiore, Times Literary Supplement


Author Information

Alex Bubb is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at King's College London. His principal interests are in Victorian literature and art, but informed by the European encounter with India. He has published articles on the diaries of Irish soldiers in the colonial armies, and on migrant Indian intellectuals in fin de siecle London. After finishing his doctorate at Oxford, he spent a year working on the archive of a Indian colonial railway contractor held at Linnaeus University, Sweden. He is currently studying the popularization of Middle Eastern and South Asian classics by the mid-Victorian publishing world.

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