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Romances of Free Trade - British Literature, Laissez-Faire, and the Global Nineteenth Century (Hardcover)
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Romances of Free Trade - British Literature, Laissez-Faire, and the Global Nineteenth Century (Hardcover)
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Exploring works by Walter Scott, Harriet Martineau, Charlotte
Bronte, Charles Dickens, and their lesser-known contemporaries,
Romances of Free Trade historicizes globalization as it traces the
perception of dissolving borders and declining national sovereignty
back into the nineteenth century.
The book offers a new account of the cultural work of romance in
nineteenth-century Britain. Celikkol argues that novelists and
playwrights employed this genre to represent a radically new
historical formation: the emergence of a globalized free-market
economy. In previous centuries, the British state had pursued an
economic policy that chose domestic goods over foreign ones.
Through the first half of the nineteenth century, liberal
economists maintained that commodity traffic across national
borders should move outside the purview of the state, a position
and practice that began to take hold as the century progressed.
Amid the transformation, Britons pondered the vertiginous effects
of rapidly accelerating economic circulation. Would patriotic
attachment to the homeland dissolve along with the preference for
domestic goods? How would the nation and the empire fare if
commerce became uncontrollable? The literary genre of romance,
characterized by protagonists who drift in lawless spaces, played a
meaningful role in addressing such pressing questions. From the
figure of the smuggler to the episodic plot structure, romance
elements in fiction and drama narrated and made tangible the
sprawling global markets and fluid capital that were reshaping the
world.
In addition to clear-eyed close readings of nineteenth-century
novels and plays, Celikkol draws on the era's major economic
theorists, figures like Adam Smith and Thomas Malthus, to vividly
illustrate the manifold ways the romance genre engaged with these
emerging financial changes."
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