This paper shows how the experience of London questions the act of naming thus questioning the epistemological frame meant to capture it. Mislead by the protean space, the authors rethink the Modernist heritage of the London imaginrary in order to adjust its biography, cartography to a city that resists representation. Eventually London’s geographical fictional space tends to any possibility at mapping it
This paper examines Mervyn Peake’s fantastical renditions of London, focusing on the London-based ci...
In 'Freud in London', Kivland and Pile follow Freud backwards in time from Maresfield Gardens to Vic...
A few years ago, a group formed by Ben Allen, Cameron Blevins, Ryan Heuser, and Matt Jockers decided...
Cet article vise à montrer comment l’expérience de la déambulation à Londres bat en brèche toute app...
The plethora of novels dedicated to describing London over the centuries is telling of the city’s pr...
This on-line essay accompanies the print essay: Melba Cuddy-Keane, “Experiencing the Modernist St...
We are accustomed to reading modernist works in the light of actual cities, glossing literary settin...
This paper concerns itself with investigating the relationship between representations and reality b...
Cities around the world are striving to be ‘global’. This book tells the story of one of them, and i...
The processes of modernisation that re-capitalised London in the post-war period can be located in b...
London exerts attraction and repulsion upon travellers, writers and artists alike.Its past is oversh...
Mapping literature has become a common metaphor in recent years, often to represent an organisationa...
In *World City*, Doreen Massey traces how two strong narratives about London have dominated politica...
The role of sight in the experience of the metropolis as a cultural artefact had a special significa...
The paper focuses on the way literary representations of London in contemporary novels are affected ...
This paper examines Mervyn Peake’s fantastical renditions of London, focusing on the London-based ci...
In 'Freud in London', Kivland and Pile follow Freud backwards in time from Maresfield Gardens to Vic...
A few years ago, a group formed by Ben Allen, Cameron Blevins, Ryan Heuser, and Matt Jockers decided...
Cet article vise à montrer comment l’expérience de la déambulation à Londres bat en brèche toute app...
The plethora of novels dedicated to describing London over the centuries is telling of the city’s pr...
This on-line essay accompanies the print essay: Melba Cuddy-Keane, “Experiencing the Modernist St...
We are accustomed to reading modernist works in the light of actual cities, glossing literary settin...
This paper concerns itself with investigating the relationship between representations and reality b...
Cities around the world are striving to be ‘global’. This book tells the story of one of them, and i...
The processes of modernisation that re-capitalised London in the post-war period can be located in b...
London exerts attraction and repulsion upon travellers, writers and artists alike.Its past is oversh...
Mapping literature has become a common metaphor in recent years, often to represent an organisationa...
In *World City*, Doreen Massey traces how two strong narratives about London have dominated politica...
The role of sight in the experience of the metropolis as a cultural artefact had a special significa...
The paper focuses on the way literary representations of London in contemporary novels are affected ...
This paper examines Mervyn Peake’s fantastical renditions of London, focusing on the London-based ci...
In 'Freud in London', Kivland and Pile follow Freud backwards in time from Maresfield Gardens to Vic...
A few years ago, a group formed by Ben Allen, Cameron Blevins, Ryan Heuser, and Matt Jockers decided...