Title:
Adventures in domesticity : gender and colonial adulteration in eighteenth-century British literature
Author:
Harrow, Sharon.
ISBN:
9780404635459
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
New York : AMS Press, c2004.
Physical Description:
vii, 265 p. ; 24 cm.
Series:
[AMS studies in the eighteenth century ; no. 45]
Series Title:
[AMS studies in the eighteenth century ; no. 45]
Contents:
1. "Homely adventures" : domesticity, adulteration, and cultural mixing in Daniel Defoe's Captain Singleton -- 2. Domesticating the colonial heart : sentimentalizing colonial difference in Richard Cumberland's The West Indian -- 3. Domesticating the colony : dramatizing domesticity in women's travel writing -- 4. "A great deal better employed doing nothing" : the role of female labor and the danger of difference in Jane Austen's Mansfield Park -- 5. Conclusion : monstrous adventures in domesticity : miscegenation and Englishness in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein.
Abstract:
"In the eighteenth century, wealth from colonial exploitation swelled the British homeland. This embarrassment of riches spelled contamination for many, a threat to the very meaning of Englishness. Harrow argues that literature responded to concerns over legitimacy, adulteration, and national identity by turning to domestic narratives. By reading the domestic home space in close relation to the domestic nation, Harrow politicizes the domestic and complicates our understanding of the relation between domesticity and cultural difference. She also explores the way the shifting meaning of domesticity paralleled generic and narrative ambiguities. Harrow reads canonical fiction (novels by Defoe, Austen, and Shelley) in a colonial context and analyzes women's travel writing in the context of abolitionist poetry, natural history, and political pamphlets."--BOOK JACKET.
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