Corridors
Corridors - Laurie Taylor explores their evolution and changing nature, from prisons to country houses, and the way in which they've been depicted in popular culture.
Corridors: We spend our lives moving through hallways and corridors, yet these channelling spaces do not feature in architectural histories. They are overlooked and undervalued. Laurie talks to Roger Luckhurst, Professor of Modern Literature at Birkbeck, University of London, whose new book charts the origins and meaning of the corridor, from country houses and utopian communities in the eighteenth centuries, through reformist Victorian prisons to the "corridors of power," as well as their often fearful depiction in popular culture. They’re joined by Kate Marshall, Associate Professor of English at the University of Notre Dame and author of a study of the intriguing place of the corridor in modernist literature.
Producer: Jayne Egerton
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RELATED LINKS
READING LIST
Roger Luckhurst, Corridors - Passages of Modernity, (Reaktion Books, 2019)
Rachel Marshall, Corridor: Media Architectures in American Fiction (University of Minnesota Press, 2013)
Broadcasts
- Wed 6 Mar 201916:00BBC Radio 4
- Mon 11 Mar 201900:15BBC Radio 4
- Mon 20 Apr 202000:15BBC Radio 4
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