Forms of Empire Forms of Empire

Forms of Empire

The Poetics of Victorian Sovereignty

    • $37.99
    • $37.99

Publisher Description

In Forms of Empire, Nathan K. Hensley shows how the modern state's anguished relationship to violence pushed writers to expand the capacities of literary form.

The Victorian era is often imagined as an "age of equipoise," but the period between 1837 and 1901 included more than two hundred separate wars. What is the difference, though, between peace and war? Forms of Empire unpacks the seeming paradoxes of the Pax Britannica's endless conflict, showing that the much vaunted equipoise of the nineteenth-century state depended on physical force to guarantee it. But the violence hidden in the shadows of all law --the violence of sovereign power itself--shuddered most visibly into being at the edges of law's reach, in the Empire, where emergency was the rule and death perversely routinized.

This book follows some of the nineteenth century's most astute literary thinkers--George Eliot, Charles Dickens, Wilkie Collins, A.C. Swinburne, H. Rider Haggard, and Robert Louis Stevenson among them--as they wrestled with the sometimes sickening interplay between order and force, and generated new formal techniques to account for fact that an Empire built on freedom had death coiled at its very heart. In contrast to the progressive idealism we have inherited from the Victorians, the writers at the core of Forms of Empire moved beyond embarrassment and denial in the face of modernity's uncanny relation to killing. Instead they sought effects--free indirect discourse, lyric tension, and the idea of literary "character" itself--that might render thinkable the conceptual vertigoes of liberal violence. In the process, they touched up to the dark core of our post-Victorian modernity.

Drawing on archival work, literary analyses, and a theoretical framework that troubles the distinction between "historicist" and "formalist" approaches, Forms of Empire links the Victorian period to the present and articulates a forceful vision of why literary thinking matters now.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2016
November 8
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
320
Pages
PUBLISHER
OUP Oxford
SELLER
The Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Oxford trading as Oxford University Press
SIZE
5.6
MB
The Afterlife of Enclosure The Afterlife of Enclosure
2021
Lacan, Foucault, and the Malleable Subject in Early Modern English Utopian Literature Lacan, Foucault, and the Malleable Subject in Early Modern English Utopian Literature
2020
Modernism and Colonialism Modernism and Colonialism
2007
The Extinct Scene The Extinct Scene
2015
Literary / Liberal Entanglements Literary / Liberal Entanglements
2017
Local Transcendence Local Transcendence
2009
Action without Hope Action without Hope
2025
Ecological Form Ecological Form
2019
Ecological Form Ecological Form
2018