The World in Play
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Matthew Kaiser
About this book
Nineteenth-century Britain was a world in play. The Victorians invented the weekend and built hundreds of parks and playgrounds. In the wake of Darwin, they re-imagined nature as a contest for survival. The playful child became a symbol of the future.
A world in play means two things: a world in flux and a world trapped, like Alice in Wonderland, in a ludic microcosm of itself. The book explores the extent to which play (competition, leisure, mischief, luck, festivity, imagination) pervades nineteenth-century literature and culture and forms the foundations of the modern self. Play made the Victorian world cohere and betrayed the illusoriness of that coherence. This is the paradox of modernity. Kaiser gives an account of how certain Victorian misfits—working-class melodramatists of the 1830s, the reclusive Emily Brontë, free spirits Robert Louis Stevenson and John Muir, mischievous Oscar Wilde—struggled to make sense of this new world. In so doing, they discovered the art of modern life.
Author / Editor information
Reviews
"Sophisticated, theoretically astute, and unfailingly interesting, The World in Play makes a compelling case for the centrality of play to Victorian conceptions of modernity."—Stephen Arata, University of Virginia
"Matthew Kaiser delivers a wise, subtle, troubling argument about the wrongs and rights of Victorian Britain's play-driven way of life, and about its persistence into the way we live now."—Herbert Tucker, University of Virginia
"In this lucid study, Kaiser (Harvard) launches a full-on attack on current understanding of Victorian serious-mindedness . . . [T]he study provocatively challenges ongoing critical and historical stereotypes of earnest Victorians. Summing up: Highly recommended."—M. E. Burstein, CHOICE
"In one of his most persuasive chapters, Kaiser takes the canonical view of Wilde as the ludic matyr of Victorian earnestess and flips it on its head. . . Kaiser goes further, though, and develops for us an Oscar Wilde who, from the depths of Reading Gaol, makes a commitment that, henceforth he will play to lose."—Kathryn Hughes, Times Literary Supplement
"Kaiser's reading of individual texts . . . is consistently illuminating and often surprising in its emphasis. A pleasure to read, the book is a thoughtful meditaition on the importance of play in Victorian literature and culture."—John O. Jordan, Nineteenth-Century Literature
"Kaiser's overarching theses will, I hope, themselves be taken up in the 'frictional and reflective' space of scholarly argument—they are far-reaching and deserving of sustained attention . . . [A]n excellent book, thought-provoking, stylish, at once witty and—dare I say it—in deadly earnest."—Jonathan Elmer, Victorian Studies
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Part I. The World in Play
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Part II. Portraits
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