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  • 1
    Book
    Book
    New York :Columbia Univ. Press,
    UID:
    almafu_BV021406585
    Format: XII, 221 S. : , Ill.
    ISBN: 0-231-13704-4 , 978-0-231-13705-8
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe ISBN 0-231-51033-0
    Language: English
    Subjects: Ethnology , English Studies
    RVK:
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Zigeuner ; Öffentliche Meinung ; Englisch ; Literatur ; Zigeuner
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New York, NY :Columbia University Press,
    UID:
    almafu_9958351705102883
    Format: 1 online resource : , 20 illus
    ISBN: 9780231510332
    Content: Gypsies and the British Imagination, 1807-1930, is the first book to explore fully the British obsession with Gypsies throughout the nineteenth century and into the twentieth. Deborah Epstein Nord traces various representations of Gypsies in the works of such well-known British authors John Clare, Walter Scott, William Wordsworth, George Eliot, Arthur Conan Doyle, and D. H. Lawrence. Nord also exhumes lesser-known literary, ethnographic, and historical texts, exploring the fascinating histories of nomadic writer George Borrow, the Gypsy Lore Society, Dora Yates, and other rarely examined figures and institutions.Gypsies were both idealized and reviled by Victorian and early-twentieth-century Britons. Associated with primitive desires, lawlessness, cunning, and sexual excess, Gypsies were also objects of antiquarian, literary, and anthropological interest. As Nord demonstrates, British writers and artists drew on Gypsy characters and plots to redefine and reconstruct cultural and racial difference, national and personal identity, and the individual's relationship to social and sexual orthodoxies. Gypsies were long associated with pastoral conventions and, in the nineteenth century, came to stand in for the ancient British past. Using myths of switched babies, Gypsy kidnappings, and the Gypsies' murky origins, authors projected onto Gypsies their own desires to escape convention and their anxieties about the ambiguities of identity. The literary representations that Nord examines have their roots in the interplay between the notion of Gypsies as a separate, often despised race and the psychic or aesthetic desire to dissolve the
    Note: Frontmatter -- , Contents -- , Illustrations -- , Acknowledgments -- , Introduction. Children of Hagar -- , 1. A “Mingled Race” Walter Scott’s Gypsies -- , 2. Vagrant and Poet: The Gypsy and the “Strange Disease of Modern Life” -- , 3. In the Beginning Was the Word: George Borrow’s Romany Picaresque -- , 4. “Marks of Race”: The Impossible Gypsy in George Eliot -- , 5. “The Last Romance”: Scholarship and Nostalgia in the Gypsy Lore Society -- , 6. The Phantom Gypsy: Invisibility, Writing, and History -- , Notes -- , Bibliography -- , Index
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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