Description

Book Synopsis
A vibrant study of the rich cultural and literary landscape of mid-eighteenth Britain and the forging of 'modern' subjectivity in a time of global war.

Trade Review
This is an impressive work of scholarship. It is exemplary in that its specific concern with Sterne's work constantly opens into an engagement with literature's political unconscious. The analysis is often dazzling. -- Alberto Moreiras, Sixth Century Professor of Modern Thought and Hispanic Studies, University of Aberdeen This brilliant book is about the cultural history of the Seven Years War -- the first global war. It describes how subjectivity was made and remade by the transforming power of globalisation, as it impinged on gender, the family, citizenship, sovereignty, work, agency, and belonging. The reach and range of its arguments are amazing. -- John Barrell, Centre for Eighteenth Century Studies, University of York A tour de force of cultural and political analysis. Carol Watts's witty and trenchant reading of mid-century literary culture shows how Britain's bellicose global expansion necessitated the invention of new subjectivities and new kinds of subjection among its readers, writers and interlocutors. The result is a fresh recognition of the Seven Years War as a Shandean, iconoclastic moment of modernity, full of radical possibility, which ultimately redefined the relations between sovereignty, state and subject. -- Kathleen Wilson, Professor of History, State University of New York Original, wide-ranging and often insightful ... critics working on the culture of the 1760s will -nd their own ideas are provoked, extended, and challenged by a careful reading of Watts's demanding new book. -- Jack Lynch, Rutgers University Review of English Studies This is an impressive work of scholarship. It is exemplary in that its specific concern with Sterne's work constantly opens into an engagement with literature's political unconscious. The analysis is often dazzling. This brilliant book is about the cultural history of the Seven Years War -- the first global war. It describes how subjectivity was made and remade by the transforming power of globalisation, as it impinged on gender, the family, citizenship, sovereignty, work, agency, and belonging. The reach and range of its arguments are amazing. A tour de force of cultural and political analysis. Carol Watts's witty and trenchant reading of mid-century literary culture shows how Britain's bellicose global expansion necessitated the invention of new subjectivities and new kinds of subjection among its readers, writers and interlocutors. The result is a fresh recognition of the Seven Years War as a Shandean, iconoclastic moment of modernity, full of radical possibility, which ultimately redefined the relations between sovereignty, state and subject. Original, wide-ranging and often insightful ... critics working on the culture of the 1760s will -nd their own ideas are provoked, extended, and challenged by a careful reading of Watts's demanding new book.

The Cultural Work of Empire

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A Hardback by Carol Watts

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    View other formats and editions of The Cultural Work of Empire by Carol Watts

    Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
    Publication Date: 06/06/2007
    ISBN13: 9780748625642, 978-0748625642
    ISBN10: 074862564X
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    Description

    Book Synopsis
    A vibrant study of the rich cultural and literary landscape of mid-eighteenth Britain and the forging of 'modern' subjectivity in a time of global war.

    Trade Review
    This is an impressive work of scholarship. It is exemplary in that its specific concern with Sterne's work constantly opens into an engagement with literature's political unconscious. The analysis is often dazzling. -- Alberto Moreiras, Sixth Century Professor of Modern Thought and Hispanic Studies, University of Aberdeen This brilliant book is about the cultural history of the Seven Years War -- the first global war. It describes how subjectivity was made and remade by the transforming power of globalisation, as it impinged on gender, the family, citizenship, sovereignty, work, agency, and belonging. The reach and range of its arguments are amazing. -- John Barrell, Centre for Eighteenth Century Studies, University of York A tour de force of cultural and political analysis. Carol Watts's witty and trenchant reading of mid-century literary culture shows how Britain's bellicose global expansion necessitated the invention of new subjectivities and new kinds of subjection among its readers, writers and interlocutors. The result is a fresh recognition of the Seven Years War as a Shandean, iconoclastic moment of modernity, full of radical possibility, which ultimately redefined the relations between sovereignty, state and subject. -- Kathleen Wilson, Professor of History, State University of New York Original, wide-ranging and often insightful ... critics working on the culture of the 1760s will -nd their own ideas are provoked, extended, and challenged by a careful reading of Watts's demanding new book. -- Jack Lynch, Rutgers University Review of English Studies This is an impressive work of scholarship. It is exemplary in that its specific concern with Sterne's work constantly opens into an engagement with literature's political unconscious. The analysis is often dazzling. This brilliant book is about the cultural history of the Seven Years War -- the first global war. It describes how subjectivity was made and remade by the transforming power of globalisation, as it impinged on gender, the family, citizenship, sovereignty, work, agency, and belonging. The reach and range of its arguments are amazing. A tour de force of cultural and political analysis. Carol Watts's witty and trenchant reading of mid-century literary culture shows how Britain's bellicose global expansion necessitated the invention of new subjectivities and new kinds of subjection among its readers, writers and interlocutors. The result is a fresh recognition of the Seven Years War as a Shandean, iconoclastic moment of modernity, full of radical possibility, which ultimately redefined the relations between sovereignty, state and subject. Original, wide-ranging and often insightful ... critics working on the culture of the 1760s will -nd their own ideas are provoked, extended, and challenged by a careful reading of Watts's demanding new book.

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