What does it mean to focus on the decade as a unit of literary history? Emerging from the shadows of iconic Victorian authors such as Eliot and Tennyson, the 1880s is a decade that has been too readily overlooked in the rush to embrace end-of-century decadence and aestheticism. The 1880s witnessed new developments in transatlantic networks, experiments in lyric poetry, the decline of the three-volume novel, and the revaluation of authors, journalists and the reading public. The contributors to this collection explore the case for the 1880s as both a discrete point of literary production, with its own pressures and provocations, and as part of literature's sense of its expanded temporal and geographical reach. The essays address a wide variety of authors, topics and genres, offering incisive readings of the diverse forces at work in the shaping of the literary 1880s.
ISBN: | 9781107181908 |
Publication date: | 17th October 2019 |
Author: | Penny Fielding, Andrew Taylor |
Publisher: | Cambridge University Press |
Format: | Hardback |
Pagination: | 260 pages |
Series: | Nineteenth-Century Literature in Transition |
Genres: |
Biography, Literature and Literary studies Literature: history and criticism Literary studies: general Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900 Literary studies: poetry and poets Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers |