Literature & literary studies:

Migration and Modernities

The State of Being Stateless, 1750-1850
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Description

Recovers a comparative literary history of migration This collection initiates transnational, transcultural and interdisciplinary conversations about migration in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Migrants are by definition liminal, and many have existed historically in the murky spaces between nations, regions or ethnicities. These essays together traverse the globe, revealing the experiences -- real or imagined -- of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century migrants, from dispossessed Native Americans to soldiers in South America, Turkish refugees to Scottish settlers. They explore the aesthetic and rhetorical frameworks used to represent migrant experiences during a time when imperial expansion and technological developments made the fortunes of some migrants and made exiles out of others. These frameworks continue to influence the narratives we tell ourselves about migration today and were crucial in producing a distinctively modern subjectivity in which mobility and rootlessness have become normative. Key Features Offers a comparative framework for understanding the modern history of migration and the aesthetics of mobility Foregrounds interdisciplinary debates about belonging, rights, and citizenship Demonstrates how mobility unsettles the national, cultural, racialized, and gendered frames we often use to organize literary and historical study Brings together scholars from the US and Europe to explore the connections between migrant experiences and the emergence of modernity Emphasizes the globalism of the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries

Author Biography:

JoEllen DeLucia is an Associate Professor of English and the Director of Women and Gender Studies at Central Michigan University. She has also published essays on women's writing, travel literature, Romantic-era literature, and Enlightenment thought. Juliet Shields is Associate Professor at the University of Washington, where she teaches eighteenth- and nineteenth-century British and American literature. She is author of Sentimental Literature and Anglo-Scottish Identity, 1745-1820 and Nation and Migration: The Making of British Atlantic Literature, 1765-1835. She has published essays on Scottish migration in ELH and European Romantic Review, and she is currently working on a book on Scottish women's writing titled "The Romance of Everyday Life".
Release date Australia
November 30th, 2020
Contributors
  • Edited by JoEllen DeLucia
  • Edited by Juliet Shields
Pages
224
Audience
  • General (US: Trade)
ISBN-13
9781474440356
Product ID
32929929

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