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Cover

London Labour and the London Poor

Henry Mayhew
Edited by Robert Douglas-Fairhurst

12 April 2012

ISBN: 9780199697571

528 pages
Paperback
196x129mm

In Stock

Oxford World's Classics

Price: £10.99

This groundbreaking investigation into the lives of London's underclass was undertaken by Henry Mayhew in the 1850s. His interviews with street traders, beggars, and thieves results in a work as vivid as a Victorian novel. This new selection includes original illustrations and an illluminating introduction and notes.

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Description

This groundbreaking investigation into the lives of London's underclass was undertaken by Henry Mayhew in the 1850s. His interviews with street traders, beggars, and thieves results in a work as vivid as a Victorian novel. This new selection includes original illustrations and an illluminating introduction and notes.

  • A new selection from Henry Mayhew's pioneering work on the lives of the London poor in Victorian England, with original illustrations, illuminating introduction, and additional material.
  • Mayhew's interviews with street traders, entertainers and others are as vivid as fiction and eye-opening in their revelations about hardship and poverty.
  • The selection offers a cross-section from all four volumes of Mayhew's bulky original work, combining a full range of human interest stories and quirky statistical calculations which open a window on to the brilliantly obsessive nature of Mayhew himself, and the way the ordinary Victorians lived.
  • Fascinating introduction looks at Mayhew's life and career, the genesis and development of the book and its influence on contemporaries such as Dickens and Kingsley, its short-term impact and longer term significance, paying particulary attention to Mayhew's style.
  • Detailed explanatory notes add further historical detail.
  • Includes a period map of London and an appendix with the first of Mayhew's newspaper assignments from which the book grew.

About the Author(s)

Henry Mayhew

Edited by Robert Douglas-Fairhurst, Fellow and Tutor in English, Magdalen College, Oxford

Henry Mayhew was a journalist, novelist, dramatist, and social investigator, born in London in 1812. He was one of the founding editors of Punch and went on to produce some of the most important journalism of the nineteenth century. His series of articles on 'Labour and the Poor' attracted wide notice and eventually grew into a massive four-volume work. He died in 1887.

Robert Douglas-Fairhurst writes regularly for the Daily Telegraph and Times Literary Supplement and has previously edited Dickens's A Christmas Carol and Other Christmas Books and Great Expectations for OWC. He is the author of Victorian Afterlives: the Shaping of Influence in Nineteenth-Century Literature (OUP, 2002).

Reviews

Review from previous edition Robert Douglas-Fairhurst has a strong sense of the contradictory forces at work in Mayhew's writing, which he compares successively to a peep show, a collection of dramatic monologues and an early work of sociology...this selection is still as long as a fair-sized novel, with helpful notes and a springy, suggestive introduction that captures the energy and variety of Mayhew's world. - John Bowen, TLS 17/12/2010

Should be required reading not just for lovers of Dickens, but for anyone who wishes to understand how our nineteenth century truly was. - Simon Heffer, Telegraph 14/01/2011

superb new edition - Ian Thomson, Evening Standard 02/12/2010

superb introduction - Michael Dirda, Washington Post 26/01/2011

some of the best descriptive writing in the English language - Roy Hattersley, New Statesman 18/10/2010

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