Vagabonds
Oskar Jensen
Category: History,
Dickensian London is brought to real and vivid life in this Wolfson History Prize-shortlisted portrait by a rising-star historian and New Generation Thinker
Until now, our view of bustling late Georgian and Victorian London has been filtered through its great chroniclers, who did not themselves come from poverty β Dickens, Mayhew, Gustave DorΓ©. Their visions were dazzling in their way, censorious, often theatrical. Now, for the first time, this innovative social history brilliantly β and radically β shows us the cityβs most compelling period (1780β1870) at street level.
From beggars and thieves to musicians and missionaries, porters and hawkers to sex workers and street criers, Jensen unites a breadth of original research and first-hand accounts and testimonies to tell their stories in their own words. What emerges is a buzzing, cosmopolitan world of the working classes, diverse in gender, ethnicity, origin, ability and occupation β a world that challenges and fascinates us still.
Reviews
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βRich in researchβ¦ a telling accountβΒ Martin Chilton, Independent (Books of the Month)
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'Compellingly written, utterly captivating...Β Jensenβs book is stuffed to bursting with original voices and sources alongside his well-crafted expert analysisβ¦ every page ofΒ VagabondsΒ rings with the thrum and bass of a city that saw itself as the centre of the world'Β Fern Riddell, BBC History magazine
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'Vagabonds is a collection of exquisite stories. Open the cover and a beguiling crowd of characters run amok...Β Jensen gives these past lives a monument, a dignity and recognition they deserve. Jensen is the real deal; Iβve never encountered a historian quite like himβΒ Gerard de Groot, The Times (Book of the Year)
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'Jensenβs fascinating, delightfully readable book is animated by a formidable passion for recovering the stories of some of metropolitan Londonβs poorest, most precarious, but also most creative people, a passion that is all too rare in accounts of the period... Vagabonds narrates their lives with a sympathy and sensitivity that is often moving'Β Matthew Beaumont, author of Nightwalking: A Nocturnal History of London
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'A very readable and historically well researched picture of the nineteenth-century poor'Β Gareth Stedman Jones, Professor of the History of Ideas, Queen Mary University of London, and author of Outcast London
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'Not only a notable accumulation, from original sources, of the horrors of survival on the streets of nineteenth-century London, but a devastating exposure of pseudo-charity as a form of coercive policing. A vigorous and necessary account made timely by the widening chasm between obscene wealth and dire poverty in our contemporary metropolis'Β Iain Sinclair, author of The Last London
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'Oskar Jensen's Vagabonds is an elegantly-written and vivid account of the people that lived and worked in Georgian and Victorian London. Jensen doesn't just present these hitherto marginalised figures on the page; like a delightful sorcerer, he brings them back to life'Β Tomiwa Owolade, award-winning author of This is Not America
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βOskar Jensen has coaxed out of the archives a vast range of original voices of the street poor of London. With great sensitivity and scholarly rigour, he ensures that, once again, we hear the lived experiences of those who lived and died on the margins of metropolitan lifeβΒ Sarah Wise, author of The Blackest Streets and Inconvenient People
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'Superb...Β Writing with an elegance and emotional intelligence that exceeds many novels, he presents us with the lives of beggars (children and adults), match sellers, buskers, milkmaids, pickpockets, prostitutes and the odd famous actor...Β We are left with the sense that despite poverty, monotony and grinding hard work, these peopleβs human spirit, optimism and humour helped them triumph over their surroundings...Β This book provides an invaluable source to anyone setting their fiction in this world, which is also an immensely entertaining and informative read in its own right.Β One of the best history books I have read recently' The Historical Novel Society
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'Fully deserving of its shortlisting in the 2023 Wolfson History prize, Oskar Jensenβs Vagabonds presents a moving, subversive, humorous, and humaneΒ biography of poverty on London nineteenth century streets'Β Family & Community History
