1st Edition
Enacting Englishness in the Victorian Period Colonialism and the Politics of Performance
Angelia Poon examines how British colonial authority in the nineteenth century was predicated on its being rendered in ways that were recognizably 'English'. Reading a range of texts by authors that include Charlotte Brontë, Mary Seacole, Charles Dickens, Rudyard Kipling, and H. Rider Haggard, Enacting Englishness in the Victorian Period focuses on the strategies - narrative, illustrative, and rhetorical - used to perform English subjectivity during the time of the British Empire. Characterising these performances, which ranged from the playful, ironic, and fantastical to the morally serious and determinedly didactic, was an emphasis on the corporeal body as not only gendered, racialised, and classed, but as (in)visible, desiring, bound in particular ways to space, and marked by certain physical stylizations and ways of thinking. As she shines a light on the English subject in the act of being and becoming, Poon casts new light on the changing historical circumstances and discontinuities in the performances of Englishness to disclose both the normative power of colonial authority as well as the possibilities for resistance.
Biography
Angelia Poon is an Assistant Professor in the Department of English Language and Literature, National Institute of Education, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore.
’Angela Poon's new volume advances an intelligent, complex argument about the crafting of "Englishness" in multiple Victorian texts and colonial sites... I enjoyed the experience of reading Enacting Englishness and recommend it for anyone who is thinking seriously about colonialism or Englishness in the most aggressive era of British imperialism. Poon is a skilled practitioner of literary and cultural theory, and her nuanced readings leave me feeling eager to see more work from her in the future.’ Victorian Studies '[Enacting Englishness] is clearly coherent and relevant and it obeys a well-documented argument debunking Victorian myths and truths all over the empire at its apex, both culturally and physically.' Cercles