
East End in Fact and Fiction
This course will take place in person.
We will discuss how imaginative fiction and historical fact intertwine to create local legend. On this course, teaching will be by lecture and group discussion. All reading extracts will be sent out in advance.
Who is this course for?
This course is for anyone with an interest in the social history of London.
What can I expect?
This will be a lecture seminar, with the tutor lecturing with PowerPoint slides, but students are encouraged to join in with questions and opinions. There is no formal homework as such, but students will be supplied in advance with the critical material that will be examined in class. They will also be given a detailed secondary reading list so that they can do deeper exploration on any topic that has sparked interest after the course has finished.
How we’re keeping you safe
August 2022 update: Keeping you safe and healthy is our number one priority.
If you test positive for Covid-19 or are asked to isolate and are not able to attend your class or pre-booked event, please contact the Bishopsgate Box Office for further information (enquiries@bishopsgate.org.uk). Please do not come to the Institute in person if you have symptoms or have tested positive.
Bishopsgate Institute has a thorough cleaning schedule in place and we clean the most populated areas more often. You will find hand-sanitising stations throughout the building as well as touch-free drinking fountains.
Find out more about how we’re keeping you safe.

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Need to Know
Metadata
- Time
- 10:00 - 16:00
- Price
- £66/ £50 conc.
- Day
- Saturday
- Duration
- 360
- Venue
- Bishopsgate Institute
- Tutor
- Sarah Wise
- Max Students
- 12
- No. of Sessions
- 1
You will learn
- The key authors and works associated with the East End
- How works of fiction have contributed to the image of the East End over time
- The social and economic historical background to each work of fiction.
Meet the Tutor

Sarah Wise
Sarah Wise teaches 19th-century social history and literature to undergraduates and adult learners and is visiting professor at the University of California’s London Study Center. Her debut, The Italian Boy: Murder and Grave Robbery in 1830s London, was shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize and won the Crime Writers' Association Gold Dagger for Non-Fiction. It was the inspiration for Sky’s The Frankenstein Chronicles.
Her follow-up, The Blackest Streets: The Life and Death of a Victorian Slum, was shortlisted for the Ondaatje Prize, and was the basis for the BBC’s series The Victorian Slum. Her most recent book, Inconvenient People, was shortlisted for the 2014 Wellcome Prize.
She contributed a chapter to ‘Charles Booth’s Poverty Maps’ -- the best-selling illustrated book by Thames & Hudson/London School of Economics. Her TV work includes providing background material for BBC1’s ‘Secret History of Our Streets’, and BBC2’s ‘The Victorian Slum’, and she has twice been the history expert on ‘Who Do You Think You Are?’ Most recently she appeared on Radio 4’s ‘In Our Time’, speaking about the work of Charles Booth.