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Oxford in English Literature - The Making, and Undoing, of the English Athens (Paperback)
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Oxford in English Literature - The Making, and Undoing, of the English Athens (Paperback)
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As 'the English Athens', Oxford has long been central to the
country's cultural life. For over six centuries the city has been
lauded, slighted and analysed in the pages of English literature.
While it has been hailed as a bastion of excellence, beauty and
truth on the one hand, it has also been denigrated for its elitism,
exclusivity and insularity on the other. Oxford in English
Literature provides for the first time a detailed overview of the
literary representations, ranging from Chaucer's account of
medieval students to modern-day detective stories. The book begins
with the legend of the eighth-century Princess Frideswide, the
city's patron saint. Praise for an English Athens first arose in
the glad springtime of Elizabethan times, and after the disruptions
of the Civil War the university settled back on its laurels,
leading to the virulent denunciations of the eighteenth-century.
The popularity of the Oxford Novel in the early nineteenth century
coincided with a Romantic upsurge in affection for the university,
culminating in Matthew Arnold's eulogy and the Oxford Myth of the
early twentieth century. The underlying argument of Dougill's work
is that the defining symbol of the literature is as much the
college wall as the dreaming spire, for writings about Oxford have
been shaped by the enclosed nature of the collegiate structure. In
literary terms it was depicted as a world of its own - secluded,
conservative, and eccentric. Idealised, it became a cloistered
utopia, an Athenian city-state, or an Arcadian idyll. The
privileged circumstance led to resentment from those on the
outside, first evident in Thomas Hardy's Jude the Obscure. With
greater egalitarian and meritocratic values in the twentieth
century, elitism came under attack and with it the notion of a
sheltered paradise. At the same time the loosening of college ties
led to diversification as writers turned to previously unexamined
parts of the city. Oxford in English Literature is aimed at the
general reader and is not burdened by specialist jargon or theory.
Its familiar subject and specially commissioned illustrations make
this a compelling book for anyone interested in Oxford, and in
English literature in general. Alice in Wonderland, Brideshead
Revisited, Oscar Wilde, J.R.R. Tolkien, C.S. Lewis, Inspector
Morse, Philip Pullman -Oxford is a literary treasure trove. This
entertaining account guides the reader through the wealth of
material in an informative and illuminating manner.
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