Nineteenth-Century Literature in Transition: The 1830s

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· Cambridge University Press
Ebook
649
Pages
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About this ebook

This instalment in the Nineteenth-Century Literature in Transition series concerns a decade that was as technologically transitional as it was eventful on a global scale. It collects work from a group of internationally renowned scholars across disciplinary boundaries in order to engage with the wide array of cultural developments that defined the 1830s. Often overlooked as a boundary between the Romantic and Victorian periods, this decade was, the book proposes, the central pivot of the nineteenth century. Far from a time of peaceful reform, it was marked by violent colonial expansion, political resistance, and revolutionary technologies such as the photograph, the expansion of steam power, and the railway that changed the world irreversibly. Contributors explore a flurry of cultural forms to take the pulse of the decade, from Silver Fork fiction to lithography, from working-class periodicals to photographs, and from urban sketches to magazine fiction.

About the author

John Gardner is Dean of the Doctoral School and Professor of English Literature at Anglia Ruskin University. Gardner is also the Leverhulme Trust Research Fellow on 'Turning the Screw: Engineering Romanticism', a project which examines convergences between literary and engineering cultures.

David Stewart is Associate Professor of English Literature at Northumbria University. He is the author of Romantic Magazines and Metropolitan Literary Culture (2011) and The Form of Poetry in the 1820s and 1830s: A Period of Doubt (2018).

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