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Walking, Literature, and English Culture is a cultural history of
walking in nineteenth-century England, assessing its importance in
literature and in culture at large. Engaging with current debates
about the relationship between industrialization and cultural
production, and between technology and the picturesque, Anne
Wallace examines the forces that transformed walking from an
unwelcome fact of life to a celebrated activity for mind and body.
Rereading Wordsworth in the context of contemporary changes in
transport, agriculture, and aesthetics, she articulates a
previously unacknowledged literary mode - peripatetic. Walking and
its representation is set in terms of specific historical
circumstances, for examples the rise of enclosure, which Wallace
shows is partially undermined by the assertion of footpath rights.
Her discussions move from eighteenth-century approaches to
peripatetic through its varied uses in Victorian literature,
notably in the work of Barrett Browning, Dickens, and Hardy. This
is a major contribution to the study of rural English literature
(and georgic), in which Anne Wallce demonstrates how a proper
understanding of peripatetic significantly enriches our assessment
of a text's relation to its culture. 'it provides an excellent
survey of literary walkers and walkers in literature, and a most
enticing bibliography. It is studded with unusual jewels.'
Christina Hardyment, The Independent
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