The Art of Walking in London
Exploring a variety of perspectives on London during the long eighteenth century, this study considers how walking made possible the various surveys and tours that characterized accounts of the capital. O'Byrne examines how walking in the city's streets and promenades provided subject matter for writers and artists. Engaging with a wide range of material, the book ranges across and investigates the various early eighteenth-century works that provided influential models for representing the city, descriptions of the promenade in St. James's Park, accounts of London that imagine the needs and interests of tourists, popular surveys of the cheats and frauds of the city uncovered on a ramble through London, and comic explorations of the pleasures and pitfalls of urban living produced in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century. Convincing and engaging, O'Byrne demonstrates the fundamental role played by walking in shaping representations of the eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century city.
- Covers writing from a range of genres, encompassing major literary works alongside popular writing and various surveys and tours of the city
- Discusses visual works alongside written media, inviting readers to explore the relationship between texts and images in the period, and how ideas and concerns are repeated and reworked in a variety of representations of the city
- Underlines the importance of walking in generating eighteenth-century representations of the city, showing how artists and readers understood and described London as an environment to be explored on foot
Reviews & endorsements
‘O'Byrne reconstructs pedestrianism as a spatial practice with specific codes and unique ways of seeing. Elegantly written, well-researched, and highly engaging, her study engages with a range of fascinating materials in multiple genres to open up new perspectives on the changing social dynamics of city walking in the eighteenth century.' Thomas Keymer, Chancellor Henry N. R. Jackman University Professor of English, University of Toronto
‘O'Byrne's engaging interdisciplinary study reconstructs eighteenth-century poetics of walking in a range of genres, reading classics such as Gay's Trivia alongside spy books, pseudo-guides, and visual aids, from street characters, sites, and encounters to the ‘diagonal mirrour' that reorders urban attractions as a three-dimensional optical illusion for the armchair traveller.' Luisa Calè, Reader in Romantic and Nineteenth-Century Literature and Visual Culture, Birkbeck, University of London
Product details
January 2025Hardback
9781009524032
282 pages
235 × 158 × 19 mm
0.55kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction: negotiating a city shower
- 1. Mobility and spectatorship in the early eighteenth-century city: the art of walking the streets of London
- 2. Promenading the mall in St. James's park
- 3. Imagining the stranger: the tourist in the streets of eighteenth-century London
- 4. London spied
- 5. Metropolitan pleasures and grievances: reimagining the art of walking the streets of London
- Conclusion: 'Much has chang'd since Trivia trod with Gay'
- Bibliography
- Index.