London and Literature
By Lubomira Gadjourov, on 19 June 2012
The UCL Festival of London and Literature held on Friday 15 June was an occasion that honoured not only the literature that comes out of London, but also the city itself and the ways in which it has influenced and inspired authors for centuries.
The final event of the day saw acclaimed writers and Booker Prize winners Alan Hollinghurst and A. S. Byatt discuss the ways in which it has inspired their own writing.
Led by the very animated head of UCL English, Professor John Mullan, the authors were prompted to discuss the ways in which their personal relationship with London has changed over the years and how their feelings have evolved as they have come to know the city better.
Neither Hollinghurst nor Byatt hail from London, and so they spoke about how they came to know the city first and foremost through the descriptions found in children’s stories, detective novels and through the music that was coming from the capital during their childhood.
Charles Dickens appears to have been hugely influential for both Hollinghurst and Byatt in the shaping of their sense of London before they had a chance to forge a personal relationship with the city. Excerpts from Great Expectations and The Uncommercial Traveller were read, and it became clear that although much has changed, Dickensian London is not far from the bustling metropolis that we know today. (more…)