Verkauf durch Sack Fachmedien

Brill

Neo-Victorian Cities

Reassessing Urban Politics and Poetics

Medium: Buch
ISBN: 978-90-04-29234-5
Verlag: Brill
Erscheinungstermin: 05.02.2015
Lieferfrist: bis zu 10 Tage
This volume explores the complex aesthetic, cultural, and memory politics of urban representation and reconfiguration in neo-Victorian discourse and practice. Through adaptations of traditional city tropes – such as the palimpsest, the labyrinth, the femininised enigma, and the marketplace of desire – writers, filmmakers, and city planners resurrect, preserve, and rework nineteenth-century metropolises and their material traces while simultaneously Gothicising and fabricating ‘past’ urban realities to serve present-day wants, so as to maximise cities’ potential to generate consumption and profits. Within the cultural imaginary of the metropolis, this volume contends, the nineteenth century provides a prominent focalising lens that mediates our apperception of and engagement with postmodern cityscapes. From the site of capitalist romance and traumatic lieux de mémoire to theatre of postcolonial resistance and Gothic sensationalism, the neo-Victorian city proves a veritable Proteus evoking myriad creative responses but also crystallising persistent ethical dilemmas surrounding alienation, precarity, Othering, and social exclusion.

Produkteigenschaften


  • Artikelnummer: 9789004292345
  • Medium: Buch
  • ISBN: 978-90-04-29234-5
  • Verlag: Brill
  • Erscheinungstermin: 05.02.2015
  • Sprache(n): Englisch
  • Auflage: Erscheinungsjahr 2015
  • Serie: Neo-Victorian Series
  • Produktform: Kartoniert
  • Gewicht: 572 g
  • Seiten: 370
  • Format (B x H): 155 x 235 mm
  • Ausgabetyp: Kein, Unbekannt

Autoren/Hrsg.

Weitere Mitwirkende

Kohlke, Marie-Luise

Gutleben, Christian

Contents

Troping the Neo-Victorian City: Strategies of Reconsidering the Metropolis, Marie-Luise Kohlke and Christian Gutleben

PART I: Capitalising on the Palimpsestic City
1. Making and Unmaking ‘Marvellous Melbourne’: The Colonial City as Palimpsest in Neo-Victorian Fiction and Non-Fiction, Kate Mitchell
2. Neo-Victorian Cities and the Ramifications of Global Capitalism in Ayeesha Menon’s Mumbai Chuzzlewits, Nathalie Vanfasse
3. Re-imagining the Victorian Flâneur in the 1960s: The London Nobody Knows by Geoffrey Fletcher and Norman Cohen, Isabelle Cases
4. ‘Part Barrier, Part Entrance to a Parallel Dimension’: London and the Modernity of Urban Perception, Julian Wolfreys

PART II: Gothicising the Metropolitan Deathscape
5. Vulnerable Visibilities: Peter Ackroyd’s Monstrous Victorian Metropolis, Jean-Michel Ganteau
6. Mapping Gothic London: Urban Waste, Class Rage and Mixophobia in Dan Simmons’s Drood, Mariaconcetta Costantini
7. Neo-Victorian Cities of the Dead: Contemporary Fictions of the Victorian Cemetery, Susan K. Martin
8. Londons under London: Mapping Neo-Victorian Spaces of Horror, Paul Dobraszczyk

PART III: Romancing the Commodified Metropolis
9. A Strangely Mingled Monster: Gender and Spatial Transgression in the Hardcore Metropolis of Paul Thomas’s Jekyll and Hyde, Laura Helen Marks
10. Steampunking New York City in Kate and Leopold, Margaret D. Stetz
11. The Ship and the Gun: The Perversity of Neo-Victorian Belfast in Glenn Patterson’s The Mill for Grinding Old People Young, Barry Sheils
12. Adaptive Re-Use: Producing Neo-Victorian Space in Hong Kong, Elizabeth Ho

Contributors
Index