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Real Oxford
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- Book Synopsis
- Oxford, city of dreaming spires, bicycles, Inspector Morse, tourists, gentility. Or perhaps a less familiar place? Jericho, once seedy backstreets with Oxford's main porn cinema and an astonishing concentration of pubs, now mythologised by Philip Pullman and gentrified beyond the wildest imaginings of the college groundsmen and porters for whom it was designed. Cowley Road, the ethnic mix of restaurants, the core of Labour-voting Oxford East ward, and one of the first to elect Green councillors. Iffley and Osney Island, characterful places where one side of the street is barges, the other terraced houses with watermarks on the front doors. Cowley and Blackbird Leys, rough, industrial but also textured by modern history. In Summertown and North Oxford, huge, elegant houses back up to the river, and North Parade has crescents of Georgian splendour.Mesopotamia attests to Oxford's history as a place of military adventure, and with the arrival of one of the UK's largest mosques, the consequences of those adventures, in a thriving and mostly happy multiculturalism. There are also places of such blandness, like Headington that McGuinness relishes the challenge of writing about them. And there are the colleges, the bookshops, galleries and museum, the city centre prison, the students, the tourists, the refugees and asylum seekers. Oxford's combination of history and the Establishment, and of transient population and change make the city a compelling subject.Patrick McGuinness has lived and worked in Oxford for thirty years and brings an intimate knowledge to this new exploration of the city. In this book he reflects on the familiar and introduces us to the unnoticed, to create a new way of looking at Oxford.
- About The Author
- Patrick McGuinness is a Professor of French and Comparative Literature at Oxford University and a Fellow of St Anne's College where he has taught since 1998. He lives in North West Wales. His poetry is published by Carcanet and he has won an Eric Gregory Award, the American Poetry Foundations Levinson Prize in 2003 and the Poetry Business Prize in 2006. He frequently writes and presents for radio, eg "A Short History of Stupidity" and "The Art of Laziness" for R3 and Night Waves and Women's Hour on poetry, French culture and his own work as a poet and translator. His translation of Mallarme's For Anatole's Tomb, 2004 was the Poetry Book Society's Translation Choice. His other books include studies of theatre, French culture and literature. Patrick is a frequent contributor to TLS, and TLRB and reads and speaks at literary festivals in UK , US, Canada , France , Czech Republic , Austria and Italy .
- Product Details
-
- ISBN
- 9781781726204
- Format
- Paperback
- Publisher
- Seren, (05 July 2021)
- Number of Pages
- 264
- Weight
- 388 grams
- Language
- English
- Dimensions
- 198 x 207 x 16 mm
- Series:
- See all books in this series
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