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E-raamat: China and the Victorian Imagination: Empires Entwined

(University of Warwick)
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Today, the 'rise' of China is omnipresent: whether articulated as opportunity or threat, expected or surprising, China's global prominence is consistently proclaimed as new and noteworthy. Yet the Victorians held similar beliefs that China was rising in importance, and that its rise was integrally tied to the success of the West. This book traces the development of this perception of China and the Chinese from the Opium Wars to the 1911 demise of the Qing dynasty. It surveys an array of literary and cultural materials, from short stories produced by British expatriates in China and distributed locally to representations of the Chinese on the British stage, from the sensational fiction surrounding the Chinese community in London's East End to turn-of-the-century invasion novels with their 'Yellow Peril' villains. Ross Forman demonstrates that China, as much as India, occupied the Victorian imagination; in so doing, he reassesses British imperialism in Asia.

Studies of the literature of the British imperialism too often focus on India to the exclusion of other areas. This book redresses the balance by demonstrating how integral China and the Chinese were to the British imagination and to globalization, literature, aesthetics, and popular culture from the 1840s to 1911.

Arvustused

' an immensely valuable and rewarding piece of scholarship.' Mia Chen, Review 19 'Ross Forman's China and the Victorian Imagination compellingly exposes China's critical role in Britain's imperial self-fashioning What Forman does exceptionally well - and what is perhaps the most important work of his book - is his careful but firm revision of a concept of Orientalism that has proven increasingly outdated and faulty.' Shanyn Fiske, Journal of British Studies

Muu info

Joint winner of Sonya Rudikoff Prize, Northeast Victorian Studies Association 2013.Ross G. Forman demonstrates how integral China and the Chinese were to the Victorian imagination and reassesses British imperialism in Asia.
List of illustrations
viii
Acknowledgments ix
Abbreviations x
Introduction: Topsy-turvy Britain and China 1(29)
1 The manners and customs of the modern Chinese: Narrating China through the treaty ports
30(34)
2 Projecting from Possession Point: James Dalziel's Chronicles of Hong Kong
64(34)
3 Peking plots: Narrating the Boxer Rebellion of 1900
98(32)
4 Britain "knit and nationalised": Asian invasion novels in Britain, 1898--1914
130(31)
5 Staging the Celestial
161(32)
6 A Cockney Chinatown: The literature of Limehouse, London
193(31)
Conclusion: No rest for the West 224(13)
Notes 237(30)
Bibliography 267(22)
Index 289
Ross Forman is Associate Professor in the Department of English and Comparative Literary Studies at the University of Warwick.