Charles Dickens's Networks

£19.99

Charles Dickens's Networks

Public Transport and the Novel

Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900 Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers History Transport technology and trades

Author: Jonathan H. Grossman

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Language: English

Published by: OUP Oxford

Published on: 1st March 2012

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 3 Mb

ISBN: 9780191632327


Charles Dickens and the Rise of the Transport Network

The same week in February 1836 that Charles Dickens was hired to write his first novel, The Pickwick Papers, the first railway line in London opened. Charles Dickens's Networks explores the rise of the global, high-speed passenger transport network in the nineteenth century and the indelible impact it made on Dickens's work.

The advent first of stage coaches, then of railways and transoceanic steam ships made unprecedented round-trip journeys across once seemingly far distances seem ordinary and systematic. Time itself was changed. The Victorians overran the separate, local times kept in each town, establishing instead the synchronized, standard time, which now ticks on our clocks.

Jonathan Grossman examines the history of public transport's systematic networking of people and how this revolutionized perceptions of time, space, and community, and how the art form of the novel played a special role in synthesizing and understanding it all. Focusing on a trio of road novels by Charles Dickens, he looks first at a key historical moment in the networked community's coming together, then at a subsequent recognition of its tragic limits, and, finally, at the construction of a revised view that expressed the precarious, limited omniscient perspective by which passengers came to imagine their journeying in the network.

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