The Nation In British Literature And Culture
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The Nation in British Literature and Culture
Author | : Andrew Murphy |
Publsiher | : Cambridge University Press |
Total Pages | : 662 |
Release | : 2023-07-31 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 9781009378833 |
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The Nation and British Literature and Culture charts the emergence of Britain as a political, social and cultural construct, examining the manner in which its constituent elements were brought together through a process of amalgamation and conquest. The fashioning of the nation through literature and culture is examined, as well as counter narratives that have sought to call national orthodoxies into question. Specific topics explored include the emergence of a distinctively national literature in the early modern period; the impact of French Revolution on conceptions of Britishness; portrayals of empire in popular and literary fiction; popular music and national imagining; the marginalisation and oppression of particular communities within the nation. The volume concludes by asking what implications an extended set of contemporary crises have for the ongoing survival both of the United Kingdom, both as a political unit and as a literary and cultural point of identity.
The Nation and British Literature
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Author | : Andrew D. Murphy |
Publsiher | : Unknown |
Total Pages | : 0 |
Release | : 2023 |
Genre | : British literature |
ISBN | : 1009378864 |
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"This book offers a comprehensive account of Britain as a national and cultural formation, exploring the relationships among the ethnic elements that were combined to create it. Shifting understandings of British identity are tracked and contemporary challenges to the ongoing survival of Britishness and British literature and culture are explored"--
Representing Place in British Literature and Culture 1660 1830
Author | : Evan Gottlieb |
Publsiher | : Routledge |
Total Pages | : 234 |
Release | : 2016-04-08 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 9781317065890 |
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Revising traditional 'rise of the nation-state' narratives, this collection explores the development of and interactions among various forms of local, national, and transnational identities and affiliations during the long eighteenth century. By treating place as historically contingent and socially constructed, this volume examines how Britons experienced and related to a landscape altered by agricultural and industrial modernization, political and religious reform, migration, and the building of nascent overseas empires. In mapping the literary and cultural geographies of the long eighteenth century, the volume poses three challenges to common critical assumptions about the relationships among genre, place, and periodization. First, it questions the novel’s exclusive hold on the imagining of national communities by examining how poetry, drama, travel-writing, and various forms of prose fiction each negotiated the relationships between the local, national, and global in distinct ways. Second, it demonstrates how viewing the literature and culture of the long eighteenth century through a broadly conceived lens of place brings to the foreground authors typically considered 'minor' when seen through more traditional aesthetic, cultural, or theoretical optics. Finally, it contextualizes Romanticism’s long-standing associations with the local and the particular, suggesting that literary localism did not originate in the Romantic era, but instead emerged from previous literary and cultural explorations of space and place. Taken together, the essays work to displace the nation-state as a central category of literary and cultural analysis in eighteenth-century studies.
Heroes in Contemporary British Culture
Author | : Barbara Korte,Nicole Falkenhayner |
Publsiher | : Routledge |
Total Pages | : 160 |
Release | : 2021-05-14 |
Genre | : Social Science |
ISBN | : 9781000382693 |
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This book explores how British culture is negotiating heroes and heroisms in the twenty-first century. It posits a nexus between the heroic and the state of the nation and explores this idea through British television drama. Drawing on case studies including programmes such as The Last Kingdom, Spooks, Luther and Merlin, the book explores the aesthetic strategies of heroisation in television drama and contextualises the programmes within British public discourses at the time of their production, original broadcasting and first reception. British television drama is a cultural forum in which contemporary Britain’s problems, wishes and cultural values are revealed and debated. By revealing the tensions in contemporary notions of heroes and heroisms, television drama employs the heroic as a lens through which to scrutinise contemporary British society and its responses to crisis and change. Looking back on the development of heroic representations in British television drama over the last twenty years, this book’s analyses show how heroisation in television drama reacts to, and reveals shifts in, British structures of feeling in a time marked by insecurity. The book is ideal for readers interested in British cultural studies, studies of the heroic and popular culture.
Italian Politics and Nineteenth Century British Literature and Culture
Author | : Patricia Cove |
Publsiher | : Edinburgh University Press |
Total Pages | : 200 |
Release | : 2019-05-14 |
Genre | : Electronic books |
ISBN | : 9781474447263 |
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This book examines the intersections among literary works by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Mary Shelley and Wilkie Collins, journalism, parliamentary records and pamphlets, to establish Britain's imaginative investment in the seismic geopolitical realignment of Italian unification.
Diplomacy in Postwar British Literature and Culture
Author | : Caroline Zoe Krzakowski |
Publsiher | : Rowman & Littlefield |
Total Pages | : 209 |
Release | : 2023 |
Genre | : Diplomacy in literature |
ISBN | : 9781683932918 |
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In Diplomacy in Postwar British Literature and Culture, Krzakowski shows how matters of international relations--refugee crises, tribunals, espionage, and diplomatic practice--have influenced the thematic and formal concerns of twentieth-century cultural production.
British Literature and Culture in Second World Wartime
Author | : Beryl Pong |
Publsiher | : Oxford University Press |
Total Pages | : 308 |
Release | : 2020-05-14 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 9780192577658 |
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British Literature and Culture in Second World Wartime excavates British late modernism's relationship to war in terms of chronophobia: a joint fear of the past and future. As a wartime between, but distinct from, those of the First World War and the Cold War, Second World wartime involves an anxiety that is both repetition and imaginary: both a dread of past violence unleashed anew, and that of a future violence still ungraspable. Identifying a constellation of temporalities and affects under three tropes—time capsules, time zones, and ruins—this volume contends that Second World wartime is a pivotal moment when wartime surpassed the boundaries of a specific state of emergency, becoming first routine and then open-ended. It offers a synoptic, wide-ranging look at writers on the home front, including Henry Green, Elizabeth Bowen, Virginia Woolf, and Rose Macaulay, through a variety of genres, such as life-writing, the novel, and the short story. It also considers an array of cultural and archival material from photographers such as Cecil Beaton, filmmakers such as Charles Crichton, and artists such as John Minton. It shows how figures harnessed or exploited their media's temporal properties to formally register the distinctiveness of this wartime through a complex feedback between anticipation and retrospection, oftentimes fashioning the war as a memory, even while it was taking place. While offering a strong foundation for new readers of the mid-century, the book's overall theoretical focus on chronophobia will be an important intervention for those already working in the field.
Home and Nation in British Literature from the English to the French Revolutions
Author | : A. D. Cousins,Geoffrey Payne |
Publsiher | : Cambridge University Press |
Total Pages | : 301 |
Release | : 2015-11-05 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 9781107064409 |
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A wide-ranging account of the contested intersection between ideas of nationhood and home in British literature between 1640 and 1830.