Restricted accessBook reviewFirst published online 2013-5
Reviews: Chaucer and the Cultures of Love and Marriage,Stage,Stake,and Scaffold: Humans and Animals in Shakespeare's Theatre,Intimacy and Sexuality in the Age of Shakespeare,Re-Imagining Western European Geography in English Renaissance Drama,Taming Cannibals: Race and the Victorians,Irish Culture and Colonial Modernity,1800–2000: The Transformation of Oral Space,Women Writers and the Artifacts of Celebrity in the Long Nineteenth Century,Charles Dickens's Networks: Public Transport and the Novel,Terrorism,Insurgency and Indian-English Literature,1830–1947,the Camera and the Press: American Visual and Print Culture in the Age of the Daguerreotype,Form and Faith in Victorian Poetry and Religion,Children's Literature and Capitalism: Fictions of Social Mobility in Britain,1850–1914,the Victorian Press and the Fairy Tale,the Rise and Fall of Meter: Poetry and English National Culture,1860–1930,Popular Fiction and Brain Science in the Late Nineteenth Century,Maps of Utopia: H. G. Wells,Modernity and the End of Culture,World Views: Metageographies of Modernist Fiction,Women's Writing,Englishness and National and Cultural Identity: The Mobile Woman and the Migrant Voice,1938–1962,Literature of the 1950s: Good,Brave Causes,Archives of Authority: Empire,Culture,and the Cold War
ShakespeareWilliamKing Lear, ed. FoakesR. A. (London, 1997), 2.2. 456.
3.
WallWendy, Staging Domesticity: Household Work and English Identity in Early Modern Drama (Cambridge, 2002), Chapter Six.
4.
DefoeDaniel, Robinson Crusoe (Boston, 1867), p. 233.
5.
Ibid., p. 230.
6.
MandlerPeter, ‘The Problem with Cultural History’, Cultural and Social History, 1 (2004), 94–117(96–7).
7.
AgambenGiorgio, State of Exception (London, 2005).
8.
Ibid., p. 71.
9.
DastonLorraineGalisonPeter, Objectivity (New York, 2007).
10.
BennettWilliam J. E., The Principles of the Book of Common Prayer Considered, a Series of Lecture-Sermons (London, 1845), p. 7.
11.
CaswallEdward, Lyra Catholica: Containing all the Breviary and Missal Hymns, with Others from Various Sources (London, 1849), x, xiii–xix.
12.
StoneleyPeter, Consumerism and American Girls' Literature, 1860–1940 (Cambridge, 2003), pp. 4–5.
13.
PrinsYopie, ‘Historical Poetics, Dysprosody, and the Science of English Verse’, PMLA, 123.1 (2008), 229–34; Michael Golston, Rhythm and Race in Modernist Poetry and Science (New York, 2008); RudyJason, Electric Meters: Victorian Physiological Poetics (Athens, 2009); HallJason, Meter Matters: Verse Cultures of the Long Nineteenth Century (Athens, 2011).
14.
StilesAnne (ed.), Neurology and Literature, 1860–1920 (Basingstoke, 2007), p. 15.
15.
MackinderHalford, ‘On the Scope and Methods of Geography’, Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society and Monthly Record of Geography9:3 (March 1887): 421–44.
16.
LewisMartinWigganKaren, Myth of Continents: A Critique of Metageography (Berkeley, 1997), p. ix.
17.
SmithNeil, ‘Contours of a Spatialized Politics: Homeless Vehicles and Production of Geographic Scale’, Social Text33 (1992), 54–81, and SmithNeil, ‘Scale-Bending and the Fate of the National’, in Scale and Geographic Inquiry: Nature Society, and Method, ed. SheppardEricMcMasterRobert (Oxford, 2003), pp. 192–212.
18.
AppiahKwame Anth, Cosmopolitanism: Ethics in a World of Strangers (New York, 2006), pp. xvi–xvii.
19.
ConradJoseph, Heart of Darkness (London: Penguin, 1994), pp. 51.