“Charles Dickens walked past here”: Dickensian Topography and the Idea of Fellowship

The essay explores the idea of Dickensian topography, in relation both to Dickens’s own preoccupation with topographical specificity in the novels and to the practices of literary tourism in “Dickens Country.” It suggests that there is a kind of synergy between the experience of his novels and the c...

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Main Author: Malcolm ANDREWS
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Laboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA) 2016-05-01
Series:E-REA
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/erea/5038
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author Malcolm ANDREWS
author_facet Malcolm ANDREWS
author_sort Malcolm ANDREWS
collection DOAJ
description The essay explores the idea of Dickensian topography, in relation both to Dickens’s own preoccupation with topographical specificity in the novels and to the practices of literary tourism in “Dickens Country.” It suggests that there is a kind of synergy between the experience of his novels and the confrontation with surviving sites connected with their actions and characters. Dickens himself, as a child, projected the imaginary characters and their adventures from his favourite eighteenth-century novelists onto the real places of his childhood home town of Chatham. In his own writing he mapped fictional events onto named real places, especially in London and Kent, with vivid topographical detailing. Hence arose the idea of a visitable Dickens Country, where Dickens enthusiasts, such as those associated with the Dickens Fellowship organisation, have a sense that they are closing in on the reality of Dickens’s imaginary worlds, and even experiencing a kind of Dickensian presence.
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spelling doaj-art-4364d97fa80c48bb8471b5fa9b71e6412025-01-09T12:54:54ZengLaboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA)E-REA1638-17182016-05-0113210.4000/erea.5038“Charles Dickens walked past here”: Dickensian Topography and the Idea of FellowshipMalcolm ANDREWSThe essay explores the idea of Dickensian topography, in relation both to Dickens’s own preoccupation with topographical specificity in the novels and to the practices of literary tourism in “Dickens Country.” It suggests that there is a kind of synergy between the experience of his novels and the confrontation with surviving sites connected with their actions and characters. Dickens himself, as a child, projected the imaginary characters and their adventures from his favourite eighteenth-century novelists onto the real places of his childhood home town of Chatham. In his own writing he mapped fictional events onto named real places, especially in London and Kent, with vivid topographical detailing. Hence arose the idea of a visitable Dickens Country, where Dickens enthusiasts, such as those associated with the Dickens Fellowship organisation, have a sense that they are closing in on the reality of Dickens’s imaginary worlds, and even experiencing a kind of Dickensian presence.https://journals.openedition.org/erea/5038LondonDickensian topographyimaginary worldsKentliterary tourismpsychogeography
spellingShingle Malcolm ANDREWS
“Charles Dickens walked past here”: Dickensian Topography and the Idea of Fellowship
E-REA
London
Dickensian topography
imaginary worlds
Kent
literary tourism
psychogeography
title “Charles Dickens walked past here”: Dickensian Topography and the Idea of Fellowship
title_full “Charles Dickens walked past here”: Dickensian Topography and the Idea of Fellowship
title_fullStr “Charles Dickens walked past here”: Dickensian Topography and the Idea of Fellowship
title_full_unstemmed “Charles Dickens walked past here”: Dickensian Topography and the Idea of Fellowship
title_short “Charles Dickens walked past here”: Dickensian Topography and the Idea of Fellowship
title_sort charles dickens walked past here dickensian topography and the idea of fellowship
topic London
Dickensian topography
imaginary worlds
Kent
literary tourism
psychogeography
url https://journals.openedition.org/erea/5038
work_keys_str_mv AT malcolmandrews charlesdickenswalkedpastheredickensiantopographyandtheideaoffellowship