This article revisits Ruth Glass’s essay ‘Aspects of Change’ (1964), in which the urban sociologist reputedly coins the term gentrification. Whereas other readers are content merely to quote Glass’s description of gentrification, I consider how she situates the phenomenon within a broader complex of urban change. Doing so, I suggest, provides a useful optic for considering later literary engagements with gentrification in London. I examine two fictional texts – Silvia Townsend Warner’s The Innocent and the Guilty (1971) and Maureen Duffy’s Capital (1975) – and argue that they follow Glass by providing ‘expanded narratives’ of gentrification. This narrative mode is distinctive for the way that it frames highly visible and seemingly localized...
At the beginning of the twenty-first century, proclamations rang out that gentrification had gone gl...
In this article we reflect on how such tensions between analytical and normative entanglements of th...
London exerts attraction and repulsion upon travellers, writers and artists alike.Its past is oversh...
This article is a contribution to debates in this journal surrounding the politics of urban epistemo...
The introduction to this Special Issue considers how literary and cultural representations of cities...
In this paper I argue that gentrification, despite the many arguments over its continuing validity a...
This dissertation uses literary theory, cultural studies, and human geography to show how social spa...
This dissertation argues that traditional models of 'place' based on the city-country dichotomy do n...
New-build gentrification has been the subject of renewed attention of late. The impetus was Lambert ...
This dissertation argues that traditional models of 'place' based on the city-country dichotomy do n...
“Station to Station: Contemporary British Literature and Urban Space After Thatcher,” examines speci...
Recent feminist critique has highlighted the need for a broader yet more nuanced approach to gentrif...
This paper reviews the debates over the explanation of gentrification and argues that gentrification...
This chapter examines the representation of urban space in British literature of the 1980s and 1990s...
In this paper I argue that gentrification, despite the many arguments over its continuing validity a...
At the beginning of the twenty-first century, proclamations rang out that gentrification had gone gl...
In this article we reflect on how such tensions between analytical and normative entanglements of th...
London exerts attraction and repulsion upon travellers, writers and artists alike.Its past is oversh...
This article is a contribution to debates in this journal surrounding the politics of urban epistemo...
The introduction to this Special Issue considers how literary and cultural representations of cities...
In this paper I argue that gentrification, despite the many arguments over its continuing validity a...
This dissertation uses literary theory, cultural studies, and human geography to show how social spa...
This dissertation argues that traditional models of 'place' based on the city-country dichotomy do n...
New-build gentrification has been the subject of renewed attention of late. The impetus was Lambert ...
This dissertation argues that traditional models of 'place' based on the city-country dichotomy do n...
“Station to Station: Contemporary British Literature and Urban Space After Thatcher,” examines speci...
Recent feminist critique has highlighted the need for a broader yet more nuanced approach to gentrif...
This paper reviews the debates over the explanation of gentrification and argues that gentrification...
This chapter examines the representation of urban space in British literature of the 1980s and 1990s...
In this paper I argue that gentrification, despite the many arguments over its continuing validity a...
At the beginning of the twenty-first century, proclamations rang out that gentrification had gone gl...
In this article we reflect on how such tensions between analytical and normative entanglements of th...
London exerts attraction and repulsion upon travellers, writers and artists alike.Its past is oversh...