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Fair Exotics

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Arguing that the major hallmarks of Romantic literature—inwardness, emphasis on subjectivity, the individual authorship of selves and texts—were forged during the Enlightenment, Rajani Sudan traces...
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  • 15 June 2013
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Arguing that the major hallmarks of Romantic literature—inwardness, emphasis on subjectivity, the individual authorship of selves and texts—were forged during the Enlightenment, Rajani Sudan traces the connections between literary sensibility and British encounters with those persons, ideas, and territories that lay uneasily beyond the national border. The urge to colonize and discover embraced both an interest in foreign "fair exotics" and a deeply rooted sense of their otherness.

Fair Exotics develops a revisionist reading of the period of the British Enlightenment and Romanticism, an age during which England was most aggressively building its empire. By looking at canonical texts, including Defoe's Robinson Crusoe, Johnson's Dictionary, De Quincey's Confessions of an English Opium Eater, and Bronte's Villette, Sudan shows how the imaginative subject is based on a sense of exoticism created by a pervasive fear of what is foreign. Indeed, as Sudan clarifies, xenophobia is the underpinning not only of nationalism and imperialism but of Romantic subjectivity as well.

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Price: $69.95
Pages: 208
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Imprint: University of Pennsylvania Press
Series: New Cultural Studies
Publication Date: 15 June 2013
ISBN: 9780812203769
Format: eBook
BISACs: LITERARY CRITICISM / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh, Literature: history and criticism
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"Offers impressive close readings which suggest how literary texts may help to shape dominant national ideologies."
Rajani Sudan is Associate Professor of English at Southern Methodist University.

Introduction
1 Institutionalizing Xenophobia: Johnson's Project
2 De Quincey and the Topography of Romantic Desire
3 Mothered Identities: Facing the Nation in the Works of Mary Wollstonecraft
4 Fair Exotics: Two Case Histories in Frankenstein and Villette
Afterword

Notes
Works Cited
Index
Acknowledgments