The demographic imagination and the nineteenth-century city : Paris, London, New York

Bibliographic Information

The demographic imagination and the nineteenth-century city : Paris, London, New York

Nicholas Daly

(Cambridge studies in nineteenth-century literature and culture, 97)

Cambridge University Press, 2015

  • : hardback

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 245-267) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In this provocative book, Nicholas Daly tracks the cultural effects of the population explosion of the nineteenth century, the 'demographic transition' to the modern world. As the crowded cities of Paris, London and New York went through similar transformations, a set of shared narratives and images of urban life circulated among them, including fantasies of urban catastrophe, crime dramas, and tales of haunted public transport, refracting the hell that is other people. In the visual arts, sentimental genre pictures appeared that condensed the urban masses into a handful of vulnerable figures: newsboys and flower-girls. At the end of the century, proto-ecological stories emerge about the sprawling city as itself a destroyer. This lively study excavates some of the origins of our own international popular culture, from noir visions of the city as a locus of crime, to utopian images of energy and community.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • 1. Under the volcano: mass destruction
  • 2. The streets of wherever: French melodrama and Anglophone localization
  • 3. The ghost comes to town: the haunted city
  • 4. The frenzy of the legible in the age of crowds
  • 5. Fur and feathers: animals and the city in an Anthropocene era
  • Conclusion.

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