Stray | An American in Victorian Cambridge | Buch | 978-0-85989-824-9 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 460 Seiten, Format (B × H): 157 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 902 g

Stray

An American in Victorian Cambridge

Charles Astor Bristed's 'Five Years in an English University'
Erscheinungsjahr 2008
ISBN: 978-0-85989-824-9
Verlag: University of Exeter Press

Charles Astor Bristed's 'Five Years in an English University'

Buch, Englisch, 460 Seiten, Format (B × H): 157 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 902 g

ISBN: 978-0-85989-824-9
Verlag: University of Exeter Press


Charles Astor Bristed (1820-1874) was the favourite grandson of John Jacob Astor (the first American multi-millionaire, and the Astor of the Waldorf-Astoria). After gaining a degree at Yale, Bristed entered Trinity College, Cambridge in 1840, graduating in 1845. An American in Victorian Cambridge is a richly detailed account of student life in the Cambridge of the 1840s. The rationale for the book, which is as appealing today as it was then, is that this is pre-eminently a book about an American student at an English university. The book belongs to a fascinating nineteenth-century trans-Atlantic publishing genre: travel accounts designed to describe British culture to Americans and vice-versa.

In this new edition, some substantial additions have been made: the Foreword and Introduction both help to contextualise the work, and point to its significance as an important historical source and as a fascinating memoir of life in Victorian Cambridge; annotation helps to identify the individuals who appear in Bristed’s text; and an index allows full use to be made of the text for the first time.

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Weitere Infos & Material


Illustrations

Photograph of Charles Astor Bristed

Foreword by Patrick Leary

Introduction by Christopher Stray

Bibliography

Original dedication

Original preface

1. First Impressions of Cambridge [1840]

2. Some Preliminaries, Rather Egotistical but Very Necessary [1835-9]

3. Introduction to College Life

4. The Cantab Language

5. An American Student's First Impressions at Cambridge and on Cambridge

6. Freshman Temptations and Experiences

7. The Boat Race [1841]

8. A Trinity Supper Party [1840]

9. The May Examination [1841]

10. The First Long Vacation [1841]

11. The Second Year [1841-2]

12. Third Year [1842-3]

13. Private Tuition

14. Long Vacation Amusements [1843]

15. A Second Edition of Third Year [1843-4]

16. The Scholarship Examination [1844]

17. The Reading Party [1844]

18. Sawdust Pudding with Ballad Sauce [1844]

19. On the Razor's Edge [1844-5]

20. How I Came To Take a Degree [1845]

21. The Polloi and the Civil Law Classes

22. The Classical Tripos [1845]

23. A visit to Eton. English Public Schools

24. Being Extinguished [1845]

25. Reading for a Trinity Fellowship [1845]

26. The study of Theology at Cambridge

27. Recent Changes at Cambridge

28. The Cambridge System of Education in its Intellectual Results

29. Physical and Social Habits of Cambridge Men. Their Amusements, &c.

30. On the State of Morals and Religion in Cambridge

31. The Puseyite Disputes in Cambridge, and the Cambridge Camden Society

32. Inferiority of our Colleges and Universities in Scholarship

33. Supposed Counterbalancing Advantages of American Colleges

34. The Advantages of Classical Studies, Particularly in Reference to the Youth of our Country

35. What Can and Ought We To Do for our Colleges?

Charles Astor Bristed 1820-1874: An annotated bibliography

Index


Stray, Christopher, Dr.
Christopher Stray is a Cambridge Classics graduate. He taught in schools before undertaking research on the history of education, and has held visiting positions at the universities of Cambridge, Yale and Princeton. He has published widely on schools and universities, examinations and institutional slang.

Christopher Stray, Department of Classics, Swansea University, is the author of Classics Transformed: Universities and Societies in England 1830-1960 (OUP 1998); The Living Word: WHD Rouse and the Crisis of Classics in Edwardian England (BCP 1992); Gilbert Murray Reassessed: Hellenism, Theatre and International Politics (OUP 2007). He has been described by Professor Amy Richlin (UCLA) as ‘the God-Emperor of Victorian Classics’.

Patrick Leary is a historian based in Evanston, Illinois who has published widely on Victorian authorship and is currently in the last stage of completing a book on Punch for the University of Toronto Press; he is founder and manager of VICTORIA, the listserv for Victorian Studies.



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