The romance of Italy and the English political imagination
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The romance of Italy and the English political imagination
St. Martin's Press, c1998
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In blurring the boundaries between fact and fiction, diplomats and travellers, English nation and Italian nation, Maura O'Connor shows us the extent to which imagination, pleasure and politics were intimately interwoven in her story of the English middle-class fascination with the Italian peninsula from the early 1800s through to the 1860s. O'Connor uses a variety of sources, ranging from travel writings and the popular press to diplomatic dispatches and official correspondence, to illustrate how influential the romance of Italy was to the bourgeois, liberal, and above all English social order during a time when class society was undergoing reconfiguration. Her use of the collective imagination as a crucial historical tool, and her emphasis on narrative as a means not only to read texts but also to understand political sources such as diplomatic documents as reflections of culture, ensures that this book breaks new ground and defies conventional categorization. Also included are the unique assertions that the concepts of Englishness and 'England' were conceived in anything but isolation, and that neither high politics nor foreign policy may be viewed as domains separate from the forces of cultural imagination and production.
Table of Contents
Introduction: The English Imagination and Italy English Travellers and Narrating the Italian Nation English Mazzinians and the Romance of Liberal Politics Trespassing the Boundaries of Separate Spheres: The Gendered Politics of Italian Nationalism Bandits, Strumpets, and Garibaldians: The Cultural Politics of Diplomacy Romancing the General: Garibaldi's Reception in England Conclusion
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