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Table of Contents
Prefatory Remarks; Preface and Acknowledgements; Contents; List of Abbreviations; Introduction; Part I Conceptualising and Historicising Psychogeography; 1. Experiencing the City: Urban Space in Literature; 1.1. Real and Imagined Cities; 1.1.1. Literary and Cultural Studies and the Concept of Space; 1.1.2. Urban Imaginaries and Cities Real and Imagined; 1.1.3. Experiencing the Urban Imaginary at Street-Level; 1.2. Psychogeography and Urban Space: From Walking to Writing; 1.2.1. Psychogeography and the Situationist International.
1.2.2. Literary Psychogeography, Or What is Psychogeographical Writing?1.2.3. Literary Psychogeography: Now and Then; 2. Bodies and Spaces: Eighteenth-Century Literary Psychogeography and the London Walker; 2.1. From Ashes to Phoenix: London Destroyed and Rebuilt; 2.2. Into the Streets: Walking in Eighteenth-Century London; 2.3. Eighteenth-Century Literary Psychogeography: From Experience to Text; 2.3.1. Experiencing the City: Themes in Literary Psychogeography; 2.3.2. Experiencing the Text: Formal Elements of Literary Psychogeography.
Part II London Imaginaries: Walking Experiences in a Changing City3. The Art of Walking; 3.1. John Gay's Trivia: Or the Art of Walking the Streets of London (1716); 3.2. John Thelwall's The Peripatetic (1793); 3.3. Conclusion; 4. "A History of Darkness, Pain, and Fear": 174 Daniel Defoe's A Journal of the Plague Year (1722); 5. Grub Street and London Low Life; 5.1. Ned Ward's The London Spy (1698-1700); 5.2. Tom Brown's Amusements Serious and Comical (1700); 5.3. Conclusion; 6. Women Walkers and Female Experiences of the City.
6.1. The Fallen Woman: Moll Flanders (1722) and The Midnight- Ramble (1754)6.2. The Compliant Woman: Frances Burney's Evelina (1778); 6.3. Conclusion; 7. Romantic Visions of the City: William Wordsworth's "Residence in London" (1805); Conclusion: How Does the World Enter the Text?; Bibliography.
1.2.2. Literary Psychogeography, Or What is Psychogeographical Writing?1.2.3. Literary Psychogeography: Now and Then; 2. Bodies and Spaces: Eighteenth-Century Literary Psychogeography and the London Walker; 2.1. From Ashes to Phoenix: London Destroyed and Rebuilt; 2.2. Into the Streets: Walking in Eighteenth-Century London; 2.3. Eighteenth-Century Literary Psychogeography: From Experience to Text; 2.3.1. Experiencing the City: Themes in Literary Psychogeography; 2.3.2. Experiencing the Text: Formal Elements of Literary Psychogeography.
Part II London Imaginaries: Walking Experiences in a Changing City3. The Art of Walking; 3.1. John Gay's Trivia: Or the Art of Walking the Streets of London (1716); 3.2. John Thelwall's The Peripatetic (1793); 3.3. Conclusion; 4. "A History of Darkness, Pain, and Fear": 174 Daniel Defoe's A Journal of the Plague Year (1722); 5. Grub Street and London Low Life; 5.1. Ned Ward's The London Spy (1698-1700); 5.2. Tom Brown's Amusements Serious and Comical (1700); 5.3. Conclusion; 6. Women Walkers and Female Experiences of the City.
6.1. The Fallen Woman: Moll Flanders (1722) and The Midnight- Ramble (1754)6.2. The Compliant Woman: Frances Burney's Evelina (1778); 6.3. Conclusion; 7. Romantic Visions of the City: William Wordsworth's "Residence in London" (1805); Conclusion: How Does the World Enter the Text?; Bibliography.