The Doom of the Great City; Being the Narrative of a Survivor, Written A.D. 1942

West Virginia University Press
West Virginia University Press
Salvaging the Anthropocene
9781959000372
$24.99
Paperback
2025-02-01
2025-02-01
This first critical edition of William Delisle Hay’s novel introduces readers to the earliest tale of urban apocalypse and environmental devastation through a curated collection of historical excerpts and contemporary scholarly discussions of global warming, colonialism, public health, and the Anthropocene.
William Delisle Hay’s The Doom of the Great City imagines the destruction of London as a result of human-induced environmental devastation, the threat of which is becoming increasingly visible today. This urban apocalypse narrative connects to pressing cultural discussions on global warming, modern life in cities, public health, and the interconnectivity of human life on earth. This first critical edition of Hay’s novella makes available his account of one man’s tale of survival amidst a toxic fog—a survival that includes his relocation to Maoriland in New Zealand. The editors foreground the relevance of the story to present and future pandemics, the persistence of environmental disasters, and the global population’s ongoing migration to cities. They place the narrative in dialogue with nineteenth-century concerns about climate change, pollution, natural resources, health care, empire, and (sub)urbanization that have remained significant challenges as we come to terms with the lasting impacts of the Anthropocene in the twenty-first century.
5.500in x 8.250in x 0.600in
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"This edition is an exemplary model of how to introduce students, scholars, and new readers alike to a little-known nineteenth-century text. The careful and attentive way in which the editors have negotiated the novella's imperial framing and settler-colonial context is impressive."
—Porscha Fermanis, professor, University College Dublin and author of Romantic Pasts: History, Fiction, and Feeling in Britain, 1790-1850
216 Pages
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