A Child of the Jago

Front Cover
Broadview Press, Oct 29, 2013 - Fiction - 300 pages

“Learn to read and write, learn all you can, learn cunning, spare nobody and stop at nothing. … Do your devilmost … for the Jago’s got you!” Dicky Perrott, growing up in the notoriously criminal enclave of the Jago, listens and learns. Compelled by his family’s circumstances to provide for his mother and siblings, he sharpens his skills as a boy thief. Along the way, he navigates the Jago’s topsy-turvy ethics, vacillating between the rival messages of his mentors, a devious local fence and a righteous slum priest. Relentless in its bleakness and violence, A Child of the Jago captures the desperate struggle for survival in 1890s East London.

This Broadview Edition provides the literary, socio-historical, and philosophical contexts vital to readers’ understanding and appreciation of the novel. Historical appendices include materials on eugenics, hooliganism, women’s sweated labor, cultural philanthropy, and the debate over the novel’s accuracy.

 

Contents

Acknowledgements
7
Introduction
9
A Brief Chronology
45
A Note on the Text
49
A CHILD OF THE JAGO
51
Glossary of Slang and Criminal Terms
239
The Debate over the Novels Veracity
243
Deciphering the Slum
253
On Eugenic Discourse in A Child of the Jago
268
Restless Energies
270
Women and MatchBox Making at Home
278
A Nichol Boyhood
282
MiddleClass Views on WorkingClass Economic Practices
286
Cultural Philanthropy
292
Maps of the Area
296
Select Bibliography
298

Class and Heredity Slum Degeneration and Atavism
260

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About the author (2013)

Diana Maltz is Professor of English at Southern Oregon University.

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