Nightwalking: a nocturnal history of London Chaucer to Dickens

by Matthew Beaumont

251 Members ½ (3.54)

On This Page

Description

""Nightwalking is, in both the physical and the moral meanings of the term, deviant. At night, in other words, the idea of wandering cannot be dissociated from the idea of erring - wanderring. This elision or semantic slurring is present in the final lines of John Milton's Paradise Lost (1667), where the poet offers a glimpse, for perpetuity, of Adam and Eve, after their expulsion from Paradise, entering the post-lapsarian world on foot: 'They, hand in hand, with wandering steps and slow, / show more Through Eden took their solitary way.' Wandering steps. In a double sense, Adam and Eve are errant: at once itinerant and aberrant. They are condemned to a life of ceaseless, restless sinfulness. ""-- show less

Tags

Recommendations

Member Reviews

Members

Recently Added By

Published Reviews

ThingScore 75
A copy of Nightwalking should be the indispensable handbook for creative writing classes from Ayrshire to East Anglia. Another message of this book might be that civilisation is to be found in the crepuscular limbo between night and day.
Robert McCrum, The Observer
Mar 29, 2015
added by souloftherose
captivating, though incomplete, book that should inspire more literary journeys into the night.
The Telegraph
added by charl08
[London is an...]Otherwise place entirely to its daytime incarnation, with different rules and different inhabitants. If this remains true of today's 24-hour, 21st-century metropolis, in which commuters setting out for work rub shoulders on the Tube platform with clubbers coming home, how much more so was it of the past versions of the city that lie buried beneath its streets?

In this show more magisterial, perambulatory survey Matthew Beaumont excavates strata upon strata of literary sources to help us find the answer. In the process he both explores the night side of some of English literature's greatest writers and resurrects many unjustly forgotten voices, who in their turn give flickering life to the denizens of London's darkness: the vagrant, the fallen, the alienated and the dispossessed. Above all, he releases an ancient, urban miasma that rises from the page, untroubled by electric illumination, allowing us to inhale what Shakespeare's contemporary Thomas Dekker called "that thick tobacco-breath which the rheumaticke night throws abroad". show less
added by charl08

Lists

Walking
25 works; 4 members

Author Information

Picture of author.
16+ Works 577 Members
Matthew Beaumont is a senior lecturer in the department of English at University College London.

All Editions

Self, Will (Foreword)

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Nightwalking: a nocturnal history of London Chaucer to Dickens
Original publication date
2015
People/Characters
Charles Dickens; William Shakespeare; Thomas Dekker; John Dunton; Ned Ward; Charles Churchill (show all 14); John Clare; Oliver Goldsmith; Richard Savage; Samuel Johnson; William Wordsworth; Charles Lamb; William Blake; Thomas De Quincey
Important places
London, England, UK
Dedication
This book is dedicated to my sons Jordan and Aleem Beaumont
Blurbers
Self, Will; Eagleton, Terry

Classifications

Genres
Literature Studies and Criticism, Nonfiction, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
820.9Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish and Old English (Anglo-Saxon) literaturesHistory, description, critical appraisal of works in more than one form
LCC
PR830 .L65 .B43Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish LiteratureProseProse fiction. The novel
BISAC

Statistics

Members
251
Popularity
129,368
Rating
½ (3.54)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
6
ASINs
4