Conceptualising place in historical fact and creative fiction: rural communities and regional landscapes in Bernard Samuel Gilbert’s ‘Old England’ (c. 1910–1920)
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Abstract The theme of place guides much exploration in rural history and local history. Attempts have been made to create definitions and typologies of place, but these have had to contend with the diverse, complex and dynamic realities of historical pattern and process, local and regional. Nonetheless, historians and those in other disciplines have evolved different approaches to the concept. This study considers how these can inform the investigation of places existing in historical fact in particular periods in the past, and can do similarly for those places located contemporaneously in fictional constructions. Reference is made to various academic writings on place, including by the local historian, David Dymond. The analysis takes the work of the author of fiction, Bernard Samuel Gilbert. Gilbert, although relatively obscure now, incorporated a feature of special note into his later literary output, and one meriting greater attention. This was his personalised, reflective and explicitly articulated approach to forming and expressing place. Moreover, Gilbert’s ‘Old England’, with its imaginary district of 'Bly', can be recognised as corresponding to landscapes and communities existing more broadly in the years up to and through the First World War, and with creations by other authors of regional fiction.
摘要地方的主题引导着乡村史和地方史的许多探索。人们曾试图创造地方的定义和类型,但这些都必须与地方和区域历史模式和过程的多样、复杂和动态现实相抗衡。尽管如此,历史学家和其他学科的人对这个概念有着不同的理解。本研究考虑了这些如何为调查过去特定时期的历史事实中存在的地方提供信息,以及如何对虚构建筑中同时存在的地方进行类似的调查。参考了当地的各种学术著作,包括当地历史学家大卫·戴蒙德的著作。该分析采用了小说作者Bernard Samuel Gilbert的作品。吉尔伯特虽然现在相对默默无闻,但在他后来的文学作品中融入了一个特别的特点,值得更多关注。这是他对形成和表达场所的个性化、反思性和明确阐述的方法。此外,吉尔伯特的《老英格兰》(Old England)以其想象中的“布莱”区(Bly),可以被认为与第一次世界大战之前和之后更广泛存在的景观和社区相对应,也与其他地区小说作者的创作相对应。
期刊介绍:
Rural History is well known as a stimulating forum for interdisciplinary exchange. Its definition of rural history ignores traditional subject boundaries to encourage the cross-fertilisation that is essential for an understanding of rural society. It stimulates original scholarship and provides access to the best of recent research. While concentrating on the English-speaking world and Europe, the journal is not limited in geographical coverage. Subject areas include: agricultural history; historical ecology; folklore; popular culture and religion; rural literature; landscape history, archaeology and material culture; vernacular architecture; ethnography, anthropology and rural sociology; the study of women in rural societies.