Sie befinden Sich nicht im Netzwerk der Universität Paderborn. Der Zugriff auf elektronische Ressourcen ist gegebenenfalls nur via VPN oder Shibboleth (DFN-AAI) möglich. mehr Informationen...
Ergebnis 11 von 16

Details

Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
Aesthetics, politics, and aggressive forms: Structures of progress and restoration in eighteenth-century narrative Britain
Ort / Verlag
ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
Erscheinungsjahr
2008
Quelle
ProQuest Dissertations & Theses A&I
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • Aesthetics, Politics, and Aggressive Forms: Structures of Progress and Restoration in Eighteenth-Century Narrative Britain argues that the incorporating 1707 Act of Union of Great Britain gave new ideological energy to formal, generic, iconic, and grammatical oppositions between "progress" and "restoration," "unity" and "fragmentation." Ephemeral print culture during the long eighteenth century foregrounds the shifting relationship between these two sets of submerged but shaping categories that correlates with aesthetic innovation in prose narratives. Majority attempts to unify the nation around a primarily English, Protestant, Whig set of priorities—as well as efforts to promote Scottish, Catholic, Tory, or Jacobite interests—are inscribed within novels, travel narratives, and national histories by Daniel Defoe, Jane Barker, Tobias Smollett, Samuel Johnson, Henry Fielding, and Susan Ferrier that exploit a perceived correlation between political structures and narrative ones. This project brings into focus anxieties about gender, monstrosity, colonialism, diaspora, religious difference, and the domestic and transatlantic "margins" of empire that are attached unevenly to the national project. It maps competing versions of Britishness and narrative aesthetics, thus disclosing the categorical confusion negotiated by their "aggressive forms." Recognizing the global and European contexts of British cultural nationalisms, it retrains our focus onto the under-explored indigenous spaces—geographical and textual—in which versions of "Britishness" are contested; it widens our frame of reference within Britain's geographic borders by breaking up patterns of generic insularity that impede the ability to trace migrations and transformations among texts, contexts, forms, and genres. Identifying a porous exchange between political contexts, archival material, and prose narratives, this project traces a confluence between political and narrative structures that is at the center of aesthetic innovation in Britain during the long eighteenth century. Ultimately, the project seeks to reshape the way we read long-eighteenth-century prose narratives across genres.
Sprache
Englisch
Identifikatoren
ISBN: 9781109247824, 1109247826
Titel-ID: cdi_proquest_journals_304438551

Weiterführende Literatur

Empfehlungen zum selben Thema automatisch vorgeschlagen von bX