Vagrancy in the Victorian Age

Vagrancy in the Victorian Age

  • Alistair Robinson
Publisher:Cambridge University PressISBN 13: 9781009022392ISBN 10: 1009022393

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Vagrancy in the Victorian Age is written by Alistair Robinson and published by Cambridge University Press. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 1009022393 (ISBN 10) and 9781009022392 (ISBN 13).

Vagrants were everywhere in Victorian culture. They wandered through novels and newspapers, photographs, poems and periodicals, oil paintings and illustrations. They appeared in a variety of forms in a variety of places: Gypsies and hawkers tramped the country, casual paupers and loafers lingered in the city, and vagabonds and beachcombers roved the colonial frontiers. Uncovering the rich Victorian taxonomy of nineteenth-century vagrancy for the first time, this interdisciplinary study examines how assumptions about class, gender, race and environment shaped a series of distinct vagrant types. At the same time it broaches new ground by demonstrating that rural and urban conceptions of vagrancy were repurposed in colonial contexts. Representational strategies circulated globally as well as locally, and were used to articulate shifting fantasies and anxieties about mobility, poverty and homelessness. These are traced through an extensive corpus of canonical, ephemeral and popular texts as well as a variety of visual forms.