Published March 20, 2023
| Version v1
Journal article
Open
Victorians in Dislocation: Migration and Fugitive Place
Description
Population mobility is an analytic category through which we can reconsider nineteenth-century literature and its locations, and not just through an imperial lens. If we look beyond the geographical boundaries of empire, we get a clearer sense of the stakes of Victorian place-making. In this essay I briefly examine a case of two hundred migrants from Scotland to Venezuela in the 1820s as a model for a different kind of analysis that thinks about the impermanent, or fugitive, elements of migration and the ways these intersect with literary study.
Files
Victorians-in-dislocation-Migration-and-fugitive-place.pdf
Files
(166.5 kB)
| Name | Size | Download all |
|---|---|---|
|
md5:6133c431609831a5aac8126e41ce29ae
|
166.5 kB | Preview Download |
Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1017/S1060150322000195
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:5787