The romance of the New World : gender and the literary formations of English colonialism
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Bibliographic Information
The romance of the New World : gender and the literary formations of English colonialism
(Cambridge studies in Renaissance literature and culture, 27)
Cambridge University Press, 2006, c1998
- : paperback
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Note
"This digitally printed first paperback version 2006" -- T. p. verso
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book studies the lively interplay between popular romances and colonial narratives during a crucial period when the values of a redefined patriarchy converged with the motives of an expansionist economy. Joan Pong Linton argues that the emergent romance figure of the husband (subsuming the roles of soldier and merchant) embodies the ideal of productive masculinity with which Englishmen defined their identity in America, justifying their activities of piracy, trade and settlement. At the same time, colonial narratives, in putting this masculinity to the test, often contradict and raise doubts about the ideal, and these doubts prompt individual romances to a self-conscious reflection on English cultural assumptions and colonial motives. Hence colonial experience reveals not just the 'romance of empire' but also the impact of the New World on English identity.
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1. Love's laborers: the busy heroes of romance and empire
- 2. Sea-knights and royal virgins: American gold and its discontents in lodge's A Margarite of America (1596)
- 3. Jack of Newbery and Drake in California: domestic and colonial narratives of English cloth and manhood
- 4. Eros and science: the discourses of magical consumerism
- 5. Gender, savagery, tobacco: marketplaces for consumption
- 6. Inconstancy: coming to Indians through Troilus and Cressida
- 7. The Tempest, 'rape', the art and smart of Virginian husbandry
- Coda: the masks of Pocahontas
- Notes
- Works cited
- Index.
by "Nielsen BookData"