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In this groundbreaking and wide-ranging study, Teresa Michals
explores why some books originally written for a mixed-age
audience, such as Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe, eventually became
children's literature, while others, such as Samuel Richardson's
Pamela, became adult novels. Michals considers how historically
specific ideas about age shaped not only the readership of novels,
but also the ways that characters are represented within them.
Arguing that age is first understood through social status, and
later through the ideal of psychological development, the book
examines the new determination of authors at the end of the
nineteenth century, such as Henry James, to write for an audience
of adults only. In these novels and in their reception, a world of
masters and servants became a world of adults and children.
Throughout the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, the Royal Navy
had a peculiar problem: it had too many talented and ambitious
officers, all competing for a limited number of command positions.
Given this surplus, we might expect that a major physical
impairment would automatically disqualify an officer from
consideration. To the contrary, after the loss of a limb, at least
twenty-six such officers reached the rank of commander or higher
through continued service. Losing a limb in battle often became a
mark of honor, one that a hero and his friends could use to
increase his chances of winning further employment at sea. Lame
Captains and Left-Handed Admirals focuses on the lives and careers
of four particularly distinguished officers who returned to sea and
continued to fight and win battles after losing an arm or a leg:
the famous admiral Lord Horatio Nelson, who fought all of his most
historically significant battles after he lost his right arm and
the sight in one eye, and his lesser-known fellow amputee admirals,
Sir Michael Seymour, Sir Watkin Owen Pell, and Sir James Alexander
Gordon. Their stories shed invaluable light on the historical
effects of physical impairment and this underexamined aspect of
maritime history.
In this groundbreaking and wide-ranging study, Teresa Michals
explores why some books originally written for a mixed-age
audience, such as Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe, eventually became
children's literature, while others, such as Samuel Richardson's
Pamela, became adult novels. Michals considers how historically
specific ideas about age shaped not only the readership of novels,
but also the ways that characters are represented within them.
Arguing that age is first understood through social status, and
later through the ideal of psychological development, the book
examines the new determination of authors at the end of the
nineteenth century, such as Henry James, to write for an audience
of adults only. In these novels and in their reception, a world of
masters and servants became a world of adults and children.
Throughout the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, the Royal Navy
had a peculiar problem: it had too many talented and ambitious
officers, all competing for a limited number of command positions.
Given this surplus, we might expect that a major physical
impairment would automatically disqualify an officer from
consideration. To the contrary, after the loss of a limb, at least
twenty-six such officers reached the rank of commander or higher
through continued service. Losing a limb in battle often became a
mark of honor, one that a hero and his friends could use to
increase his chances of winning further employment at sea. Lame
Captains and Left-Handed Admirals focuses on the lives and careers
of four particularly distinguished officers who returned to sea and
continued to fight and win battles after losing an arm or a leg:
the famous admiral Lord Horatio Nelson, who fought all of his most
historically significant battles after he lost his right arm and
the sight in one eye, and his lesser-known fellow amputee admirals,
Sir Michael Seymour, Sir Watkin Owen Pell, and Sir James Alexander
Gordon. Their stories shed invaluable light on the historical
effects of physical impairment and this underexamined aspect of
maritime history.
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