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Forms of Empire - The Poetics of Victorian Sovereignty (Hardcover)
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Forms of Empire - The Poetics of Victorian Sovereignty (Hardcover)
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In Forms of Empire, Nathan K. Hensley shows how the modern state's
anguished relationship to violence pushed writers to expand the
capacities of literary form. The Victorian era is often imagined as
an "age of equipoise," but the period between 1837 and 1901
included more than two hundred separate wars. What is the
difference, though, between peace and war? Forms of Empire unpacks
the seeming paradoxes of the Pax Britannica's endless conflict,
showing that the much vaunted equipoise of the nineteenth-century
state depended on physical force to guarantee it. But the violence
hidden in the shadows of all law -the violence of sovereign power
itself-shuddered most visibly into being at the edges of law's
reach, in the Empire, where emergency was the rule and death
perversely routinized. This book follows some of the nineteenth
century's most astute literary thinkers-George Eliot, Charles
Dickens, Wilkie Collins, A.C. Swinburne, H. Rider Haggard, and
Robert Louis Stevenson among them-as they wrestled with the
sometimes sickening interplay between order and force, and
generated new formal techniques to account for fact that an Empire
built on freedom had death coiled at its very heart. In contrast to
the progressive idealism we have inherited from the Victorians, the
writers at the core of Forms of Empire moved beyond embarrassment
and denial in the face of modernity's uncanny relation to killing.
Instead they sought effects-free indirect discourse, lyric tension,
and the idea of literary "character" itself-that might render
thinkable the conceptual vertigoes of liberal violence. In the
process, they touched up to the dark core of our post-Victorian
modernity. Drawing on archival work, literary analyses, and a
theoretical framework that troubles the distinction between
"historicist" and "formalist" approaches, Forms of Empire links the
Victorian period to the present and articulates a forceful vision
of why literary thinking matters now.
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