1st Edition

Images of Imperial Rule

By Hugh Ridley Copyright 1983
    196 Pages
    by Routledge

    196 Pages
    by Routledge

    Originally published in 1983. In the late nineteenth century as the European powers divided the world between themselves and scrambled over Africa, so their writers went with them, recording in fiction, as well as in historical narrative, the events and issues of the colonial expansion. The literature which they left behind them is the subject of this book.

    Taking Robinson Crusoe as the starting point for colonial literature, the book looks at linking themes and ideas in the colonial literatures of England, Frances and Germany. In drawing the attention of English-speaking readers to the writing of these other countries, English fiction is placed in a wider context. The comparison also emphasises a homogeneity in the various traditions of colonial literature which goes beyond mere flag waving.

    Preface and Acknowledgements;  Introduction:  Robinson Crusoe and the Reading of Colonial Literature;  1. Antecedents  2. Colonial Fiction: A Literary History  3. Imperial Landscapes  4. Slaves and Mistresses  5. Justifications of Empire  6. The Unexpected Elite  7. Colonial Theory and Domestic Practice;  Bibliographies;  Index

    Biography

    Hugh Ridley