Versuchen GOLD - Frei
Down but not out
BBC History UK
|August 2022
FERN RIDDELL applauds an honest portrait of 19th-century street life in Britain's capital, highlighting the hopes, fears and toils of real people who strove for more than just survival
It's not often a book comes across my desk that deserves high praise, but Oskar Jensen's Vagabonds is worthy of just that. Compellingly written, this account of the loves, lives and losses of the people who navigated the warrens and thoroughfares of Oskar Jensen Regency and Victorian London is utterly captivating. It's part of an important body of works that focus on "history from below" the lives of ordinary folk rather than the deeds of great men.
Jensen's book is stuffed to bursting with original voices and sources alongside his well-crafted expert analysis. In it we meet renegades and professional criminals as well as embattled elders, all of whom lived, worked, and loved on London's streets.
As Jensen investigates and dissects the characters we might come across while wandering this great city, we first meet the abandoned babies and lost infants Charles Dickens was so fond of depicting. But, as Jensen makes clear, what he really wants his readers to do is to turn their "backs on Dickens and the rest" - ignore what they think they know about the lives he has found and instead prepare to be surprised. This is not a new idea: academic historians have been pushing back against our cultural reliance on Dickens for some time. His fictional version of the past often ignored the realities and agency - especially of women - that can be found during this exciting an explosive era of our history.

Diese Geschichte stammt aus der August 2022-Ausgabe von BBC History UK.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON BBC History UK
BBC History UK
Royal progress
Alice Loxton's new book begins with a compelling premise.
1 mins
January 2026
BBC History UK
"Leaving Muslim contributions out of European history has allowed Islamophobic sentiment to flourish"
THARIK HUSSAIN speaks to Danny Bird about the long but often overlooked and distorted history of Muslims in Europe - and the enduring resistance to its reappraisal
9 mins
January 2026
BBC History UK
7 UNMISSABLE TRIPS IN 2026
With new routes, big anniversaries and fresh ways of discovering familiar favourites, TOM HALL highlights historical destinations to explore this year
4 mins
January 2026
BBC History UK
SOPHIE SCHOLL
Novelist Simon Scarrow chooses
2 mins
January 2026
BBC History UK
Portrait of the artists
TRACY BORMAN is enraptured by a beautifully written and richly illustrated exploration of early modern English art
2 mins
January 2026
BBC History UK
Humble heroes
Statues celebrate monarchs, rulers and conquerors - but who remembers the brave folk who gave their lives to save others? Anna Maria Barry recounts stories of selfsacrificing but otherwise ordinary people from the 19th and 20th centuries who are commemorated in one London park.
9 mins
January 2026
BBC History UK
BACK FROM THE DEAD
Britain’s War Office thanked the SAS for its remarkable efforts in WW2 by abolishing it – yet soon realised the error of its ways. Gavin Mortimer tells the story of how the elite unit reinvented itself to confront the challenges of the postwar world
8 mins
January 2026
BBC History UK
Q&A - A selection of historical conundrums answered by experts
Were Roman gladiators vegetarian?
8 mins
January 2026
BBC History UK
Martha McGill on a pioneering study of folk beliefs in early modern England
I was recently chatting with a handful of early modernists about the history book we'd take to a desert island.
1 min
January 2026
BBC History UK
Independent empires
Viewing the British empire through an American lens provides an intriguing alternative perspective on the 'Land of the Free', says DAVID ARMITAGE
4 mins
January 2026
Translate
Change font size
