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Writing the Stage Coach Nation: Locality on the Move in Nineteenth-Century British Literature
Contributor(s): Livesey, Ruth (Author)
ISBN: 0198769431     ISBN-13: 9780198769439
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
OUR PRICE:   $99.75  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: November 2016
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Literary Criticism | English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh
- Literary Criticism | Modern - 19th Century
Dewey: 823.809
LCCN: 2016938539
Physical Information: 0.9" H x 5.5" W x 8.6" (1.00 lbs) 256 pages
Themes:
- Cultural Region - British Isles
- Chronological Period - 19th Century
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Why is it that so many of the best-loved novels of the Victorian era take place not in the steam-powered railway present in which they were published, but in the very recent past? Most works by Dickens, Bronte, Eliot, and Hardy set action neither in the present nor in a definitively historical
epoch but rather in a just past of collective memory, a vanishing but still tangible world moving by stage and mail coach. It is easy to overlook the fact that Jane Eyre, Bleak House, and Middlemarch, for example, are in this sense historical novels, recreating places and times that are just
slipping from the horizon of here and now. Ruth Livesey brings to the surface the historical consciousness of such novels of the just past and explores how they convey an idea of a national belonging that can be experienced through a sense of local place.

The journey by public coach had long been an analogy for the form of the novel as it took shape in the eighteenth century; smooth engineered roads and the rapid circulation of print was one means by which Britain was reimagined as a modern, peaceable, and communicative nation in the aftermath of the
Napoleonic wars. But by the later 1840s the end of the stage coach was assured and that made it a highly-charged figure of a lost national modernity. In its halts, relays, stops at inns, and crossing points, the stage and mail coach system offered a different experience of mobility and
being-in-place--passages of flight and anchoring points--from the vectors of the railway that radiated out from industrial and urban centers. This book opens by examining the writing of the stage coach nation in Walter Scott's fiction and in the work of the radical journalists William Hazlitt and
William Cobbett. Livesey suggests that in turning to the just past of the stage coach imaginary, later novels by Dickens, Bronte, and Eliot reach out to the possibility of a nation knitted together by the affect of strongly felt local belonging. This vision is of a communicative nation at its
liveliest when the smooth passage of characters and words are interrupted and overset, delivering readers and protagonists to local places, thick with the presence of history writ small.