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Book Synopsis
During the long eighteenth century, Britain won and lost an empire in North America while consolidating its hegemony on the Indian subcontinent. The idea of imperial Britain became an essential piece of national self-definition, so that to be British was to be a citizen of an imperial power. The British literary imagination inevitably participated in the formulation and interrogation of this new national character, examining in fiction empire's effects on the world at home. Imperial Characters traces a range of literary articulations of how British national character is formed, changed, and distorted by the imperial project. Tara Wallace argues that each text she considers, from Aphra Behn's early description of seventeenth-century colonists in Surinam to Robert Louis Stevenson's historical narrative about eighteenth-century Scotsmen roaming the globe, enacts the opportunities, disruptions, and dangers of imperial adventurism. Through close readings of works by Behn, Pope, Thomson, Defoe, Smollett, Bage, Hamilton, Scott, and Stevenson, contextualized within historical moments, Wallace persuasively shows how literary texts rehearse the risks incurred in the course of imperial expansion, not only to British lives but also to cherished national values.

Trade Review
Tara Ghoshal Wallace’s Imperial Characters: Home and Periphery in Eighteenth-Century Literature succeeds with a preponderance of selective but finely-faceted and typically historicized close readings of English and Scottish literature, especially novels. In addition to offering such attentive exfoliation of primary material, the book stimulates the reader with some unexpected pairings and an innovative structure.... Imperial Characters remains freshly relevant and newly intriguing as the twenty-first century wears on in interesting ways. * The Eighteenth-Century Intelligencer *

Imperial Characters: Home and Periphery in

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    A Hardback by Tara Ghoshal Wallace

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      View other formats and editions of Imperial Characters: Home and Periphery in by Tara Ghoshal Wallace

      Publisher: Bucknell University Press
      Publication Date: 01/07/2010
      ISBN13: 9781611483352, 978-1611483352
      ISBN10: 1611483352

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      During the long eighteenth century, Britain won and lost an empire in North America while consolidating its hegemony on the Indian subcontinent. The idea of imperial Britain became an essential piece of national self-definition, so that to be British was to be a citizen of an imperial power. The British literary imagination inevitably participated in the formulation and interrogation of this new national character, examining in fiction empire's effects on the world at home. Imperial Characters traces a range of literary articulations of how British national character is formed, changed, and distorted by the imperial project. Tara Wallace argues that each text she considers, from Aphra Behn's early description of seventeenth-century colonists in Surinam to Robert Louis Stevenson's historical narrative about eighteenth-century Scotsmen roaming the globe, enacts the opportunities, disruptions, and dangers of imperial adventurism. Through close readings of works by Behn, Pope, Thomson, Defoe, Smollett, Bage, Hamilton, Scott, and Stevenson, contextualized within historical moments, Wallace persuasively shows how literary texts rehearse the risks incurred in the course of imperial expansion, not only to British lives but also to cherished national values.

      Trade Review
      Tara Ghoshal Wallace’s Imperial Characters: Home and Periphery in Eighteenth-Century Literature succeeds with a preponderance of selective but finely-faceted and typically historicized close readings of English and Scottish literature, especially novels. In addition to offering such attentive exfoliation of primary material, the book stimulates the reader with some unexpected pairings and an innovative structure.... Imperial Characters remains freshly relevant and newly intriguing as the twenty-first century wears on in interesting ways. * The Eighteenth-Century Intelligencer *

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