This book gives an ambitious revisionist account of the
nineteenth-century British novel and its role in the complex
historical process that ultimately gave rise to modern
anthropology's concept of culture and its accredited researcher,
the Participant Observer. Buzard reads the great nineteenth-century
novels of Charles Dickens, Charlotte Bronte, George Eliot, and
others as "metropolitan autoethnographies" that began to exercise
and test the ethnographic imagination decades in advance of formal
modern ethnography--and that did so while focusing on Western
European rather than on distant Oriental subjects.
"Disorienting Fiction" shows how English Victorian novels
appropriated and anglicized an autoethnographic mode of fiction
developed early in the nineteenth century by the Irish authors of
the "National Tale" and, most influentially, by Walter Scott.
Buzard demonstrates that whereas the fiction of these non-English
British subjects devoted itself to describing and defending (but
also inventing) the cultural autonomy of peripheral regions, the
English novels that followed them worked to imagine limited and
mappable versions of English or British culture in reaction against
the potential evacuation of cultural distinctiveness threatened by
Britain's own commercial and imperial expansion. These latter
novels attempted to forestall the self-incurred liabilities of a
nation whose unprecedented reach and power tempted it to
universalize and export its own customs, to treat them as simply
equivalent to a globally applicable civilization. For many
Victorian novelists, a nation facing the prospect of being able to
go and to exercise its influence just about anywhere in the world
also faced the danger of turning itself into a cultural nowhere.
The complex autoethnographic work of nineteenth-century British
novels was thus a labor to disorient or de-globalize British
national imaginings, and novelists mobilized and freighted with new
significance some basic elements of prose narrative in their
efforts to write British culture into being.
Sure to provoke debate, this book offers a commanding
reassessment of a major moment in the history of British
literature."
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