Actions for China and the Victorian imagination : empires entwined
China and the Victorian imagination : empires entwined / Ross G. Forman
- Author
- Forman, Ross G.
- Published
- Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2013.
- Physical Description
- 1 online resource (318 pages).
Access Online
- Series
- Contents
- Cover; Contents; Illustrations; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; Introduction Topsy-turvy Britain and China; Imagined possibilities; Empires entwined; Overview: Why China and the Chinese?; Why China matters; Albion's East: disciplinary and historical concerns and Britain's imagined view of China; Chinese boxes, or China contained; Chapter 1 The manners and customs of the modern Chinese Narrating China through the treaty ports; The literary littoral; Concessions: a history; The conventions of late Victorian culture on the China Coast; Excursions in the interior., Chapter 2 Projecting from Possession Point James Dalziel's Chronicles of Hong KongTheorizing from the fringes of Asia; Hugging China; Onshore/offshore: tampering with identikit models of empire; Whither the white lords of the island?; Hybridity in Hong Kong: "despised alike of East and West"; Uncommon trysts: the unbearable morality of immoral relations; Chapter 3 Peking plots Narrating the Boxer Rebellion of 1900; A state of siege; The power of disguise; Misguided motives: narrating the Chinese point of view., Chapter 4 Britain "knit and nationalised" Asian invasion novels in Britain, 1898-1914War of the world; Insidious insiders; Technologies of takeover; Chapter 5 Staging the Celestial; Chin-chin-chinaman: Chinese stage types; China on a plate; Blackface, yellowface, and loss of face; Bloodthirsty Buddhas; Spectacular politics and dramatic moralities; East of opium: dramas of morality, politics, and empathy; Chapter 6 A Cockney Chinatown The literature of Limehouse, London; "A Chinaman's chance"; A paw thing but mine own; Dens of iniquity; Conclusion No rest for the West; Notes., and Introduction: Topsy-turvy Britain and ChinaChapter 1: The manners and customs of the modern Chinese Narrating China through the treaty ports; Chapter 2: Projecting from Possession Point James Dalziel's Chronicles of Hong Kong; Chapter 3: Peking plots Narrating the Boxer Rebellion of 1900; Chapter 4: Britain "knit and nationalised" Asian invasion novels in Britain, 1898-1914; Chapter 5: Staging the Celestial; Chapter 6: A Cockney Chinatown The literature of Limehouse, London; Conclusion: No rest for the West; Bibliography; Primary Sources; Secondary Sources; Index.
- Summary
- Ross Forman demonstrates how integral China and the Chinese were to the Victorian imagination and reassesses British imperialism in Asia.
- Subject(s)
- 1800-1899
- English literature—19th century—History and criticism
- English literature—Chinese influences
- Littérature anglaise—19e siècle—Histoire et critique
- 18.05 English literature
- 18.07 English literature outside Europe and the USA
- LITERARY CRITICISM—European—English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh
- Civilization—Chinese influences
- English literature
- Literature
- Great Britain—Civilization—Chinese influences
- China—In literature
- China
- Great Britain
- Genre(s)
- ISBN
- 9781461936619 (electronic bk.)
1461936616 (electronic bk.)
9781139003803 (electronic bk.)
1139003801 (electronic bk.)
9781107275119
1107275113
9781107013155
1107013151
9781107273887 (E-BOOK)
1107273889 - Bibliography Note
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
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