A new scholarly edition of a bold yet overlooked Victorian text that blends the genres of memoir, travelogue, ethnography and the realist novel
- Permits students and academic researchers to access more subtle assessments of Lavengro, as well as a range of relevant contexts
- Reappraises the relation of Lavengro to nineteenth-century writings on Romani and traveller culture
- Explores George Borrow's influence on an array of later Victorian and modernist authors such as Ford Madox Ford and Virginia Woolf.
- Surveys and gauges recent debates and critical accounts of George Borrow's life and literary career
This critical edition of George Borrow's Lavengro: The Scholar, The Gypsy, The Priest (1851) brings a renewed focus on a formally inventive and original text for scholars of the nineteenth-century autobiographical novel and travelogue. This edition reflects and develops research that anchors Borrow's energetically eccentric vision in a range of notable contexts. The scholarly introduction gives readers unfamiliar with the formidably prolific Borrow an opportunity to discover more about this author's career at home and abroad (as a translator for the British and Foreign Bible Society), his stylistic innovations, and how Lavengro evokes a 'wild England' that became crucial for admirers in the next century such as D.H. Lawrence, Ford Madox Ford, and Virginia Woolf.
Sprache
Verlagsort
Dateigröße
ISBN-13
978-1-3995-1688-4 (9781399516884)
Schweitzer Klassifikation