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2012 | 47 | 4 | 177-195

Article title

When William Met Mary: The Rewriting of Mary Lamb’S and William-Henry Ireland’S Stories in Peter Ackroyd’S The Lambs Of London

Authors

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
Peter Ackroyd’s London novels represent a distinctive component in his project of composing a literary-historical biography of the city. Understanding London as a multilayered palimpsest of texts, Ackroyd adds to this ongoing process by rewriting the city’s history from new, imaginative perspectives. For this he employs approaches and strategies such as parody, pastiche, genre mixture, metafiction, intertextuality and an incessant mixing of the factual with the fictititious. The aim of this article is to explore the various ways in which he toys with historical reality and blurs the borderline between fiction and biography in The Lambs of London (2004), offering thus an alternative rendering of two unrelated offences connected with late eighteenth and early nineteenth century London literary circles: Mary Lamb’s matricide and William-Henry Ireland’s forgeries of the Shakespeare Papers.

Keywords

Publisher

Year

Volume

47

Issue

4

Pages

177-195

Physical description

Dates

published
2012-12-01
online
2013-03-27

Contributors

  • Charles University, Prague

References

  • Ackroyd, Peter 2005 The Lambs of London. London: Vintage.
  • Ackroyd, Peter 2003 London: The biography. New York: Anchor. 2004 Albion: The origins of the English imagination. London: Vintage.
  • Bentley, Nick (ed.) 2005 British fiction of the 1990s. London: Routledge.
  • Gibson, Jeremy - Julian Wolfreys 2000 Peter Ackroyd: The ludic and labyrinthine Text. London: Macmillan Press.
  • Greenblatt, Stephen 1980 Renaissance self-fashioning: From More to Shakespeare. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
  • Gregoriou, Christiana 2007 Deviance in contemporary crime fiction. London: Palgrave Macmillan.[WoS]
  • Hitchcock, Susan Tyler 2005 Mad Mary Lamb: Lunacy and murder in literary London. London: W.W. Norton Company.
  • Kelly, Linda 2008 The marvellous boy: The life and myth of Thomas Chatterton. London: Faber and Faber.
  • Lewis, Barry 2007 My words echo thus: Possessing the past in Peter Ackroyd. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press.
  • Murray, Alex 2007 Recalling London: Literature and history in the work of Peter Ackroyd and IainSinclair. London: Continuum.
  • Onega, Susana 1998 Peter Ackroyd. Plymouth: Northcote House.
  • Phillips, Lawrence 2011 London narratives: Post-war fiction and the city. London: Continuum.
  • Pierce, Patricia 2004 The Great Shakespeare Fraud. Gloucestershire: Sutton Publishing.
  • Robinson, Alan 2011 Narrating the past: Historiography, memory and the contemporary novel. London: Palgrave Macmillan.[WoS]
  • Stewart, Doug 2010 The boy who would be Shakespeare: A tale of forgery and folly. Cambridge (US): Da Capo Press.
  • Watson, Kathy 2004 The devil kissed her: The story of Mary Lamb. London: Bloomsbury Publishing.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.doi-10_2478_v10121-012-0018-4
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