Romantic Citizenship and the Transatlantic World

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A01=Alison Cotti-Lowell
American gothic
Author_Alison Cotti-Lowell
British national identity
bureaucratic citizenship
Category=DS
Category=DSBD
Category=DSBF
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
expatriation
migration
national tale
post-abolition Britain
Romantic women writers

Product details

  • ISBN 9781666972986
  • Weight: 480g
  • Dimensions: 150 x 230mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Apr 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Within the wide discursive arena of national identity in Romantic fiction, this book examines specific literary tropes and figures that consolidate and challenge the nascent, evolving concept of the British citizen.

Alison Cotti-Lowell attends to the figure of the wanderer in the National Tale to reveal a mode of national belonging that was increasingly untethered to land, genealogy, and nativity in Romantic Britain. Across the Atlantic, the author surveys how tropes of the “virtual” and disembodiment became central to burgeoning articulations of proto-bureaucratic citizenship in the Anglo-American revolutionary context. The author analyzes sentimental novels of courtship and marriage in which struggles between dependence and independence reveal the citizenly potential of women living in Britain under the strictures and structures of coverture. Cotti-Lowell examines literary repatriation to illuminate the relationship between Britain and its colonial West-Indian branch in the early post-abolition era. Through close literary-critical interpretation, this book connects Romantic fiction to matters of nationalism, individual subject formation, and bureaucracy to reveal how forms of citizenship and the citizenly subject were forged in literary form and discourse with close ties to the gothic register, across the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries in the English-speaking North Atlantic World.

Alison Cotti-Lowell is Lecturer in English at the University of Virgina.

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