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Book

Hunger Movements in Early Victorian Literature

Book

Hunger Movements in Early Victorian Literature

DOI link for Hunger Movements in Early Victorian Literature

Hunger Movements in Early Victorian Literature book

Want, riots, migration

Hunger Movements in Early Victorian Literature

DOI link for Hunger Movements in Early Victorian Literature

Hunger Movements in Early Victorian Literature book

Want, riots, migration
ByLesa Scholl
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2016
eBook Published 24 May 2016
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315587660
Pages 210
eBook ISBN 9781315587660
Subjects Humanities, Language & Literature
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Scholl, L. (2016). Hunger Movements in Early Victorian Literature: Want, riots, migration (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315587660

ABSTRACT

In Hunger Movements in Early Victorian Literature, Lesa Scholl explores the ways in which the language of starvation interacts with narratives of emotional and intellectual want to create a dynamic, evolving notion of hunger. Scholl's interdisciplinary study emphasises literary analysis, sensory history, and political economy to interrogate the progression of hunger in Britain from the early 1830s to the late 1860s. Examining works by Charles Dickens, Harriet Martineau, George Eliot, Elizabeth Gaskell, Henry Mayhew, and Charlotte Bronte, Scholl argues for the centrality of hunger in social development and understanding. She shows how the rhetoric of hunger moves beyond critiques of physical starvation to a paradigm in which the dominant narrative of civilisation is predicated on the continual progress and evolution of literal and metaphorical taste. Her study makes a persuasive case for how hunger, as a signifier of both individual and corporate ambition, is a necessarily self-interested and increasingly violent agent of progress within the discourse of political economy that emerged in the eighteenth century and subsequently shaped nineteenth-century social and political life.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

Hunger, taste, mobility

chapter 1|38 pages

Rewriting riots past

chapter 2|34 pages

Humanising the mob

chapter 3|33 pages

Disenfranchised communities

chapter 4|33 pages

Educating transgressive tastes

chapter 5|26 pages

Social communion

chapter 6|8 pages

Conclusion

‘Taste them and try’—the risks of tasting in an insatiable market
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