Being English : narratives, idioms, and performances of national identity from Coleridge to Trollope

Bibliographic Information

Being English : narratives, idioms, and performances of national identity from Coleridge to Trollope

Julian Wolfreys

State University of New York Press, c1994

  • : hard
  • pbk. : alk. paper

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [217]-239) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Drawing on recent developments concerning national identity in post-Marxist criticism and Derridean philosophy, Wolfreys looks at the ways in which literature is used to represent the English middle-classes to themselves, using texts by Coleridge, Wordsworth, Arnold, Gaskell, Collins, Eliot, and Trollope.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Introduction: The "Seemingly Indecipherable Metaphysics of Being" English or, Where to Begin? 1. Of Detours, Returns, Addictions and Women: Coleridge, Wordsworth and National Identity 2. Matthew Arnold, Englishness and a Question of Spirit 3. Arnold, Englishness and Critical Avoidance: A Reading of "My Countrymen" 4. Critical Nationalism and the "Truth" of (Identity in) Elizabeth Gaskell 5. Wilkie Collins and the (Secret) Heart of English Culture 6. The Ideology of Englishness: The Paradoxes of Tory-Liberal Culture and National Identity in Daniel Deronda 7. Reading Trollope: Whose Englishness is it Anyway? (In) Conclusion: Towards a New Victorianism? Notes Select Bibliography Index

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