The Wandering Fictions of George Borrow
A Literature on the Move 1840–1940
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Published:30th Apr '25
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Assessing the full range of Borrow’s published texts, as well as his remarkable impact on a diverse range of Edwardian and modernist cultural producers in the half-century following his death, this book explores the context, origins and development of Borrow’s imaginative enterprise. This project attests to Borrow’s pivotal influence on verbal, visual and performative representations of the ‘gypsy’ between 1840 and 1945 when, as David Cressy observes, ‘more was written in English’ about the Romany than ‘in any previous period of history’. It also uncovers how Borrow’s stylistic idiosyncrasies and formal innovations extend across and between genres, and further into the transitional gaps between life-writing and land-writing and how his books, which were once runaway bestsellers, became side-lined and mere footnotes in the Victorian canon.
This wide-ranging and persuasively argued study offers a major reinterpretation of George Borrow’s somewhat overlooked writings, and valuably alerts the reader to crucial issues of tramping, vagrancy and gypsy folklore in the Victorian period. Andrew Radford convincingly demonstrates the ways in which these texts worked to deconstruct the prevailing literary canon, and his exemplary new critique makes a ground-breaking contribution to our understanding of nineteenth-century rural writing and its legacy. -- Roger Ebbatson, Lancaster University
ISBN: 9781399546423
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
240 pages