Radical Orientalism: Rights, Reform, and Romanticism

Radical Orientalism: Rights, Reform, and Romanticism

by Gerard Cohen-Vrignaud
Radical Orientalism: Rights, Reform, and Romanticism

Radical Orientalism: Rights, Reform, and Romanticism

by Gerard Cohen-Vrignaud

Hardcover

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Overview

This fascinating study reveals the extent to which the Orientalism of Byron and the Shelleys resonated with the reformist movement of the Romantic era. It documents how and why radicals like Bentham, Cobbett, Carlile, Hone and Wooler, among others in post-Revolutionary Britain, invoked Turkey, North Africa and Mughal India when attacking and seeking to change their government's domestic policies. Examining a broad archive ranging from satires, journalism, tracts, political and economic treatises, and public speeches, to the exotic poetry and fictions of canonical Romanticism, Gerard Cohen-Vrignaud shows that promoting colonization was not Orientalism's sole ideological function. Equally vital was its aesthetic and rhetorical capacity to alienate the people's affection from their rulers and fuel popular opposition to regressive taxation, penal cruelty, police repression, and sexual regulation.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781107110328
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 07/30/2015
Series: Cambridge Studies in Romanticism , #111
Pages: 280
Product dimensions: 0.67(w) x 9.02(h) x 5.98(d)

About the Author

Gerard Cohen-Vrignaud is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Tennessee. He has published articles in English Literary History, Modern Language Quarterly, Studies in Romanticism, Nineteenth-Century Literature, the Dickens Studies Annual, and Differences.

Table of Contents

Introduction: radical Orientalism and the rights of man; 1. Cruel and unusual romance: Beckford, Byron, and the abomination of violence; 2. Reading the Oriental Riot Act: petition, assembly, and Shelley's constitutional sublime; 3. Splendors and miseries of the British Sultanate: economic Orientalism, inequality, and radical satire; 4. Reasoning like a Turk: indolence and fatalism in Sardanapalus and The Last Man; 5. Byronic infidelity and despotic individuality: sex, religion, and free agency; Bibliography.
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