Fear, Loathing, and Victorian Xenophobia
In this groundbreaking collection, scholars explore Victorian xenophobia as a rhetorical strategy that transforms “foreign” people, bodies, and objects into perceived invaders with the dangerous power to alter the social fabric of the nation and the identity of the English. Essays in the collected edition look across the cultural landscape of the nineteenth century to trace the myriad tensions that gave rise to fear and loathing of immigrants, aliens, and ethnic/racial/religious others. This volume introduces new ways of reading the fear and loathing of all that was foreign in nineteenth-century British culture, and, in doing so, it captures nuances that often fall beyond the scope of current theoretical models. “Xenophobia” not only offers a distinctive theoretical lens through which to read the nineteenth century; it also advances and enriches our understanding of other critical approaches to the study of difference. Bringing together scholarship from art history, history, literary studies, cultural studies, women’s studies, Jewish studies, and postcolonial studies, Fear, Loathing, and Victorian Xenophobia seeks to open a rich and provocative dialogue on the global dimensions of xenophobia during the nineteenth century.
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Fear, Loathing, and Victorian Xenophobia
In this groundbreaking collection, scholars explore Victorian xenophobia as a rhetorical strategy that transforms “foreign” people, bodies, and objects into perceived invaders with the dangerous power to alter the social fabric of the nation and the identity of the English. Essays in the collected edition look across the cultural landscape of the nineteenth century to trace the myriad tensions that gave rise to fear and loathing of immigrants, aliens, and ethnic/racial/religious others. This volume introduces new ways of reading the fear and loathing of all that was foreign in nineteenth-century British culture, and, in doing so, it captures nuances that often fall beyond the scope of current theoretical models. “Xenophobia” not only offers a distinctive theoretical lens through which to read the nineteenth century; it also advances and enriches our understanding of other critical approaches to the study of difference. Bringing together scholarship from art history, history, literary studies, cultural studies, women’s studies, Jewish studies, and postcolonial studies, Fear, Loathing, and Victorian Xenophobia seeks to open a rich and provocative dialogue on the global dimensions of xenophobia during the nineteenth century.
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Fear, Loathing, and Victorian Xenophobia

Fear, Loathing, and Victorian Xenophobia

Fear, Loathing, and Victorian Xenophobia

Fear, Loathing, and Victorian Xenophobia

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Overview

In this groundbreaking collection, scholars explore Victorian xenophobia as a rhetorical strategy that transforms “foreign” people, bodies, and objects into perceived invaders with the dangerous power to alter the social fabric of the nation and the identity of the English. Essays in the collected edition look across the cultural landscape of the nineteenth century to trace the myriad tensions that gave rise to fear and loathing of immigrants, aliens, and ethnic/racial/religious others. This volume introduces new ways of reading the fear and loathing of all that was foreign in nineteenth-century British culture, and, in doing so, it captures nuances that often fall beyond the scope of current theoretical models. “Xenophobia” not only offers a distinctive theoretical lens through which to read the nineteenth century; it also advances and enriches our understanding of other critical approaches to the study of difference. Bringing together scholarship from art history, history, literary studies, cultural studies, women’s studies, Jewish studies, and postcolonial studies, Fear, Loathing, and Victorian Xenophobia seeks to open a rich and provocative dialogue on the global dimensions of xenophobia during the nineteenth century.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814254288
Publisher: Ohio State University Press
Publication date: 11/28/2016
Edition description: 1
Pages: 392
Product dimensions: (w) x (h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Marlene Tromp is professor of English and women and gender studies, and Dean of the New College of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences at Arizona State University. Maria K. Bachman is professor and chair in the Department of English at Coastal Carolina University. Heidi Kaufman is assistant professor of English at the University of Oregon.

Table of Contents

Introduction · Coming to Terms with Xenophobia: Fear and Loathing in Nineteenth-Century England
 

Part I · Epidemic Fear

1 The Pollution of the East: Economic Contamination and Xenophobia in Little Dorrit and The Mystery of Edwin Drood

2 Victorian Quarantines: Holding the Borders against “Fevered” Italian Masculinity in Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s “St. Agnes of Intercession”

3 Contracting Xenophobia: Etiology, Inoculation, and the Limits of British Imperialism

4 Charles Dickens, Wilkie Collins, and the Perils of Imagined Others

5 Maudlin Profanity and Midnight Debauchery: Infanticide and the Angelito
 

Part II · Xenophobic Panic

6 Food, Famine, and the Abjection of Irish Identity in Early Victorian Representation

7 “Wot is to Be”: The Visual Construction of Empire at the Crystal Palace Exhibition, London, 1851

8 Terrible Turks: Victorian Xenophobia and the Ottoman Empire Patrick Brantlinger 208

9 Ethnicity as Marker in Henry Mayhew’s London Labour and the London Poor
 

Part III · The Foreign Invasion

10 Jewish Space and the English Foreigner in George Eliot’s Daniel Deronda

11 Exile London: Anarchism, Immigration, and Xenophobia in Late-Victorian Literature

12 Xenophobia on the Streets of London: Punch’s Campaign against Italian Organ-Grinders, 1854-1864

13 “You know not of what you speak”: Language, Identity, and Xenophobia in Richard Marsh’s The Beetle: A Mystery (1897)

14 Dracula’s Blood of Many Brave Races
 

Afterword · Fear and Loathing: Victorian Xenophobia

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