Home and Nation in British Literature from the English to the French Revolutions
★★★★★
★★★★★
English
In a world of conflicting nationalist claims, mass displacements and asylum-seeking, a great many people are looking for 'home' or struggling to establish the 'nation'. These were also important preoccupations between the English and the French revolutions: a period when Britain was first at war within itself, then achieved a confident if precarious equilibrium, and finally seemed to have come once more to the edge of overthrow. In the century and a half between revolution experienced and revolution observed, the impulse to identify or implicitly appropriate home and nation was elemental to British literature. This wide-ranging study by international scholars provides an innovative and thorough account of writings that vigorously contested notions and images of the nation and of private domestic space within it, tracing the larger patterns of debate, while at the same time exploring how particular writers situated themselves within it and gave it shape.
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Product Details
Weight: 570g
Dimensions: 159 x 235mm
Publication Date: 05 Nov 2015
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781107064409
About
A. D. Cousins is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities and a Member of the Order of Australia. He has published thirteen books in America and England including monographs on Thomas More Shakespeare's non-dramatic verse and religious verse of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. He is on the Editorial Board of Moreana the international journal of More and Erasmus studies and of the Journal of Language Literature and Culture (JLLC) (formerly AUMLA). Geoffrey Payne is Lecturer in the Department of English at Macquarie University Australia. He served as treasurer for the Australasian Universities Language and Literature Association from 2008 to 2013 and was Managing Editor of their journal (AUMLA) between 2008 and 2011. His first book Dark Imaginings: Ideology and Darkness in the Poetry of Lord Byron was published in 2008.