Dedication
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Nationalism Beyond the Nation-State
Graham MacPhee & Prem Poddar
PART I: NATION AND EMPIRE
Chapter 1. "As White As Ours": Africa, Ireland, Imperial
Panic, and the Effects of British Race Discourse
Enda Duffy
Chapter 2. Writing About Englishness: South Africa’s
Forgotten Nationalism
Vivian Bickford-Smith
Chapter 3. Passports, Empire, Subjecthood
Prem Poddar
Chapter 4. Friends Across the Water: British Orientalists
and Middle Eastern Nationalisms
Geoffrey Nash
Chapter 5. Under English Eyes: The Disappearance of
Irishness in Conrad’s The Secret Agent
Graham MacPhee
PART II: POSTCOLONIAL LEGACIES
Chapter 6. Brit Bomber: The Fundamentalist Trope in Hanif
Kureishi’s The Black Album and "My Son the Fanatic"
Sheila Ghose
Chapter 7. Crisis of Identity? Englishness, Britishness,
and Whiteness
Bridget Byrne
Chapter 8. Conserving Purity, Labouring the Past: A
Tropological Evolution of Englishness
Colin Wright
Chapter 9. All the Downtown Tories: Mourning Englishness
in New York
Matthew Hart
Notes on Contributors
Index
Graham MacPhee has taught at universities in Britain and the US and is currently Assistant Professor of English at West Chester University of Pennsylvania. He is the author of The Architecture of the Visible: Technology and Urban Visual Culture (Continuum, 2002).
"This is an intellectually rigorous collection of essays investigating the nature of "Englishness" both within and beyond national borders… [It] offers a useful and timely intervention into analyses of the continuing significance of empire in understanding English/British identity and culture… the relationship of history to present circumstances, and the co-option of the "past" for political objectives, is a key theme… while several of its essays are grounded in the field of literature and contemporary culture, historians should not be tempted to overlook this important collection." · English Historical Review "The coherence of the volume derives from – and it is, in some respects a remarkably coherent volume – an introduction that anticipates, indeed, proves the theoretical coordinates through which the individual essays form their analyses." · College Literature "This excellent collection of essays addresses with great range and significant insight urgent questions that have long haunted and are again animating the relation of Englishness to Britishness, of nationalism to imperialism, of local cultural grammars to global political forms. In collecting the essays for the volume and in their own contributions to and introduction of it, the editors have done a superb job of reminding readers why the many paradoxes of "Englishness" are vital not only to the long history of the formal British empire but to the moment of flexible imperialism we currently inhabit. This is a timely and striking addition to the field." · Ian Baucom, Duke University.
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