
Unashamedly a book for the bookish, yet accessible and frequently entertaining, this is the first book devoted to how libraries are depicted in imaginative writing. Covering fiction, poetry, and drama from the late Middle Ages to the present, it runs the gamut of British and American literature, as well as examining a range of fiction in other languages—from Rabelais and Cervantes to modern and contemporary French, Italian, Japanese, and Russian writing. While the tropes of the complex catalogue and the bibliomaniacal reader persist throughout the centuries, libraries also emerge as societal battle-sites where issues of personality, gender, cultural power, and national identity are contested repeatedly and often in surprising ways. As well as examining how libraries were deployed in their work by canonical authors from Cervantes, Shakespeare, and Swift to Jane Austen, George Eliot, and Jorge Luis Borges, the volume also examines in detail the haunted libraries of Margaret Oliphant and M. R. James, and a range of much less familiar historic and contemporary authors. Alert to the depiction of librarians as well as of book-rooms and institutional readers, this book will inform, entertain, and delight. At a time when traditional libraries are under pressure, Libraries in Literature shows the power of their lasting fascination.
This volume investigates the evolving representation of libraries as both physical spaces and symbolic sites within imaginative literature from the late Middle Ages to the contemporary era. Alice Crawford, an expert in the field, synthesizes a wide array of British, American, and international texts to argue that libraries function as critical battlegrounds for identity, power, and cultural discourse. The work examines how authors utilize the library setting to explore themes of bibliomania, institutional authority, and the shifting role of the reader in society.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and bibliophiles frequently cite this work as a foundational text for understanding the intersection of literary history and library studies. Readers note the accessibility of the prose despite the academic rigor applied to the diverse range of primary sources analyzed.
Page Count:
336
Publication Date:
2022-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0192668269
ISBN-13:
9780192668264
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