« Walk with me, reader, into Whitecross Street. It is Saturday night, the market-night of the poor... » — « With this ominous invitation, the narrator begins one of the most powerful depictions of fin-de-siècle London in literary history », écrit, conquise, Debbie Harrison. Actuellement Honorary Research Fellow à Birkbeck College (Université de Londres), elle est l’auteur d’une thèse, « A Victorian Hangover : Narratives of Addiction 1830-1900 » (monographie du même titre à paraître), qui prit..
The sense of exclusion is ubiquitous in George Gissing’s fiction ; whether it be heavily foregrounde...
Publisher\u27s Description: Colour digital images of rare books, ephemera, maps and other materials ...
In Trollope's 1858 The Three Clerks, the coming of commuter railways generates a peculiarly modern i...
This chapter examines George Gissing's last novel 'The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft', arguing th...
George Gissing's work reflects his observations of fin-de-siècle London life. Influenced by the Fren...
The following text is taken from the publisher's website: "Simon J James examines how Gissing's wor...
The Nether World (1889) is Gissing’s fifth London novel. It sits alongside New Grub Street (1891), B...
Drawing on Hans Robert Jauss' theory of the horizon of expectations, I examine a character type that...
George Gissing’s novels sit on the permeable boundary between the diegetic tendencies of 19th-centur...
George Gissing’s fifth published novel Thyrza (1887) has a wide geographical scope, stretching from ...
George Gissing’s friend and fellow novelist, H. G Wells, would remember the ‘last decade of the nine...
In his depiction of Alma Frothingham, the female protagonist of The Whirlpool, George Gissing inters...
In The Nether World, published in 1889, Gissing portrays the squalid life of the working class in Lo...
The Houseless Shadow explores the continuities between London’s nocturnal life as it is now, compare...
Delatte F. George Gissing. The immortal Dickens . In: Revue belge de philologie et d'histoire, tome ...
The sense of exclusion is ubiquitous in George Gissing’s fiction ; whether it be heavily foregrounde...
Publisher\u27s Description: Colour digital images of rare books, ephemera, maps and other materials ...
In Trollope's 1858 The Three Clerks, the coming of commuter railways generates a peculiarly modern i...
This chapter examines George Gissing's last novel 'The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft', arguing th...
George Gissing's work reflects his observations of fin-de-siècle London life. Influenced by the Fren...
The following text is taken from the publisher's website: "Simon J James examines how Gissing's wor...
The Nether World (1889) is Gissing’s fifth London novel. It sits alongside New Grub Street (1891), B...
Drawing on Hans Robert Jauss' theory of the horizon of expectations, I examine a character type that...
George Gissing’s novels sit on the permeable boundary between the diegetic tendencies of 19th-centur...
George Gissing’s fifth published novel Thyrza (1887) has a wide geographical scope, stretching from ...
George Gissing’s friend and fellow novelist, H. G Wells, would remember the ‘last decade of the nine...
In his depiction of Alma Frothingham, the female protagonist of The Whirlpool, George Gissing inters...
In The Nether World, published in 1889, Gissing portrays the squalid life of the working class in Lo...
The Houseless Shadow explores the continuities between London’s nocturnal life as it is now, compare...
Delatte F. George Gissing. The immortal Dickens . In: Revue belge de philologie et d'histoire, tome ...
The sense of exclusion is ubiquitous in George Gissing’s fiction ; whether it be heavily foregrounde...
Publisher\u27s Description: Colour digital images of rare books, ephemera, maps and other materials ...
In Trollope's 1858 The Three Clerks, the coming of commuter railways generates a peculiarly modern i...