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Entertaining Crisis in the Atlantic Imperium, 17701790

English

By (author): Daniel O'Quinn

Less than twenty years after asserting global dominance in the Seven Years' War, Britain suffered a devastating defeat when it lost the American colonies. Daniel O'Quinn explores how the theaters and the newspapers worked in concert to mediate the events of the American war for British audiences and how these convergent media attempted to articulate a post-American future for British imperial society. Building on the methodological innovations of his 2005 publication Staging Governance: Theatrical Imperialism in London, 1770-1800, O'Quinn demonstrates how the reconstitution of British imperial subjectivities involved an almost nightly engagement with a rich entertainment culture that necessarily incorporated information circulated in the daily press. Each chapter investigates different moments in the American crisis through the analysis of scenes of social and theatrical performance and through careful readings of works by figures such as Richard Brinsley Sheridan, William Cowper, Hannah More, Arthur Murphy, Hannah Cowley, George Colman, and Georg Friedrich Handel. Through a close engagement with this diverse entertainment archive, O'Quinn traces the hollowing out of elite British masculinity during the 1770s and examines the resulting strategies for reconfiguring ideas of gender, sexuality, and sociability that would stabilize national and imperial relations in the 1780s. Together, O'Quinn's two books offer a dramatic account of the global shifts in British imperial culture that will be of interest to scholars in theater and performance studies, eighteenth-century studies, Romanticism, and trans-Atlantic studies. See more
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Original price €77.99
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Product Details
  • Weight: 703g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Jul 2011
  • Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
  • Publication City/Country: United States
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9780801899317

About Daniel O'Quinn

Daniel O'Quinn is a professor in the School of English and Theatre Studies at the University of Guelph Ontario and author of Staging Governance: Theatrical Imperialism in London 1770-1800 also published by Johns Hopkins. He is also coeditor of the Cambridge Companion to British Theater 1730-1830 and editor of Travels of Mirza Abu Taleb Khan.

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