Literature, immigration, and diaspora in fin-de-siècle England : a cultural history of the 1905 Aliens Act
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Bibliographic Information
Literature, immigration, and diaspora in fin-de-siècle England : a cultural history of the 1905 Aliens Act
Cambridge University Press, 2012
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 201-225) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The 1905 Aliens Act was the first modern law to restrict immigration to British shores. In this book, David Glover asks how it was possible for Britain, a nation that had prided itself on offering asylum to refugees, to pass such legislation. Tracing the ways that the legal notion of the 'alien' became a national-racist epithet indistinguishable from the figure of 'the Jew', Glover argues that the literary and popular entertainments of fin de siecle Britain perpetuated a culture of xenophobia. Reconstructing the complex socio-political field known as 'the alien question', Glover examines the work of George Eliot, Israel Zangwill, Rudyard Kipling and Joseph Conrad, together with forgotten writers like Margaret Harkness, Edgar Wallace and James Blyth. By linking them to the beliefs and ideologies that circulated via newspapers, periodicals, political meetings, Royal Commissions, patriotic melodramas and social surveys, Glover sheds new light on dilemmas about nationality, borders and citizenship.
Table of Contents
- List of illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1. Messianic neutrality: George Eliot and the politics of national identity
- 2. Palaces and sweatshops: East End fictions and East End politics
- 3. Counterpublics of anti-Semitism
- 4. Writing the 1905 Aliens Act
- 5. Restriction and its discontents
- Afterword
- Notes
- Index.
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