1st Edition

Locating Classed Subjectivities Intersections of Space and Working-Class Life in Nineteenth-, Twentieth-, and Twenty-First-Century British Writing

Edited By Simon Lee Copyright 2022
    250 Pages
    by Routledge

    250 Pages
    by Routledge

    Locating Classed Subjectivities explores representations of social class in British fiction through the lens of spatial theory and analysis. By analyzing a range of class-conscious texts from the nineteenth-, twentieth-, and twenty-first centuries, the collection provides an overview of the way British writers mobilized spatial aesthetics as a means to comment on the intricacies of social class. In doing so, the collection delineates aesthetic strategies of representation in British writing, tracing the development of literary forms while considering how authors mobilized innovative spatial metaphors to better express contingent social and economic realities. Ranging in coverage from early-nineteenth-century narratives of disease to contemporary writing on the working-class millennial, Locating Classed Subjectivities offers new perspectives on literary techniques and political intentions, exploring the way class is parsed and critiqued through British writing across three centuries. As such, the project responds to Nigel Thrift and Peter Williams’s claim that literary and cultural production serves as a particularly rich yet unexamined access point by which to comprehend the way space and social class intersect.

     

    Introduction: Space and Social Class in Nineteenth-, Twentieth-, and Twenty-first-century British Writing

    Simon Lee

    1 Fevered Anxieties: Public Health, Infrastructure, and Infectious Classes in Austen, Edgeworth, and Scott

    Matthew L. Reznicek

    2 Spaces of Little Dorrit; or, The Global Marshalsea

    Meghan Jordan

    3 "For God’s sake, women, go out and play": Nomadic Space in the Work of Ethel Carnie Holdsworth

    Patricia E. Johnson

    4 "Class Lives": Spatial Awareness and Political Consciousness in British Mining Novels of the 1930s

    Nick Hubble

    5 Remembering the Future: A Modernized London in Proud City and The End of the Affair

    Elizabeth Floyd

    6 "Low tastes": John Braine, Drinking and Class

    Ben Clarke

    7 Addressing Stigma: Demonized Locales in Pat Barker's Union Street

    Simon Lee

    8 Ghost Towns: The Haunting, Deindustrialized Spaces of Ross Raisin’s Waterline and Martin Amis’s Lionel Asbo

    Nick Bentley

    9 "Paths that Lead Me Back": Zadie Smith’s Northwest London

    Molly Slavin

    10 "Be Gone": Escaping Racialized Working-Class Space in Bernardine Evaristo’s Mr. Loverman and Girl, Woman, Other

    Cornelia Photopoulos

    11 "All I need is myself": Spatializing Neoliberal Class Consciousness in the Northern Millennial Novel

    Chloé Ashbridge

    Biography

    Simon Lee is Assistant Professor of English at Texas State University where he researches and teaches post-war British Literature with a particular focus on working-class writing and culture. He has published a range of scholarship on British writing, specifically authors like Alan Sillitoe, Shelagh Delaney, Colin MacInnes, Nell Dunn, and John Osborne.