Ancient Rome and Victorian Masculinity: Classical Presences
Autor Laura Eastlakeen Limba Engleză Hardback – 3 dec 2018
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198833031
ISBN-10: 0198833032
Pagini: 258
Ilustrații: 9 black-and-white illustrations
Dimensiuni: 149 x 223 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Classical Presences
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198833032
Pagini: 258
Ilustrații: 9 black-and-white illustrations
Dimensiuni: 149 x 223 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Classical Presences
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
... E.[Eastlake] wonderfully shows how imperial masculinity couched in the language of Classical Rome was continually contested and up for grabs in Victorian Britain
The book's approach, through the lens of gender studies, politics, and imperialism, is also innovative and gives the book a very clear direction and purpose as well as a wide appeal beyond literary studies in a narrow sense ... the book is extremely rigorous, showing a wide breadth and depth of scholarship and an effective methodology. The author has combed the archives, including letters, magazine and newspaper articles, and a great range of secondary criticism. The theoretical basis of her approach to masculinity is securely grounded in recent studies while moving forward to explore Victorian alternatives to the limited and conventional models of masculinity that were available at the time.
As Laura Eastlake's Ancient Rome and Victorian Masculinity convincingly argues, in the Victorian age conservative and radical politicians, men of letters, imperial conquerors and rulers, and even aesthetes and Wildean decadents saw themselves as latter-day Romans... This detailed account of the reception of ancient Rome joins with other current scholarship in deconstructing the idea of a single unified Victorian masculinity. At a given historical moment, the changing confluence of class position, education, and the real world of foreign threats and of empire creates different styles of manliness. The study, then, productively expands our sense of the importance of Roman models within the Victorian male psyche... Eastlake reminds us that the British envisioned their empire as a new Rome.
Laura Eastlake's elegant monograph weaves together many disparate threads in a clear and persuasive way. It is a pleasure to see visual, ephemeral, political, and literary evidence discussed with equal care. The book has much to offer Classicists and Victorianists in both its level of specificity and its methodology.
There is a high level of originality in this project...the book is extremely rigorous, showing a wide breadth and depth of scholarship and an effective methodology. The author has combed the archives, including letters, magazine and newspaper articles, and a great range of secondary criticism...The case studies, such as that of the reception of the Emperor Nero who was perceived as either monstrous or as an ideal of artistic masculinity, are both fascinating and well-argued.
As an academic project,Ancient Rome and Victorian Masculinityis a massive accomplishment. Eastlake's reach as a scholar of nineteenth-century literature and culture is extensive...
Eastlake's interpretation of Marius the Epicurean, both as a novel and as an intervention into Victorian debates on masculinity, is exemplary; she makes this structurally difficult historical novel relevant to its time and accessible to our own. . . . This is a well-researched, well written, and historically sensitive book. It refuses to fix a single meaning of the Roman world for the Victorians, instead cultivating multiple understandings of both Roman antiquity and Victorian masculinity, as well as their many intersections
it is hard not to enjoy Eastlake's wide reading, her careful choice of sources, her detailed interpretations, her well-chosen illustrations. From the early decades of the nineteenth century, when the Roman ideal seemed to have been monopolised by Napoleon, while Greek imagination and flexibility could be better appropriated in Britain, to the militarising ideologies of turn-of-the-century imperialists, we are taken through a vast range of different and often contradictory interpretations, literary, political and cultural. Distinctly enlightening.
The book's approach, through the lens of gender studies, politics, and imperialism, is also innovative and gives the book a very clear direction and purpose as well as a wide appeal beyond literary studies in a narrow sense ... the book is extremely rigorous, showing a wide breadth and depth of scholarship and an effective methodology. The author has combed the archives, including letters, magazine and newspaper articles, and a great range of secondary criticism. The theoretical basis of her approach to masculinity is securely grounded in recent studies while moving forward to explore Victorian alternatives to the limited and conventional models of masculinity that were available at the time.
As Laura Eastlake's Ancient Rome and Victorian Masculinity convincingly argues, in the Victorian age conservative and radical politicians, men of letters, imperial conquerors and rulers, and even aesthetes and Wildean decadents saw themselves as latter-day Romans... This detailed account of the reception of ancient Rome joins with other current scholarship in deconstructing the idea of a single unified Victorian masculinity. At a given historical moment, the changing confluence of class position, education, and the real world of foreign threats and of empire creates different styles of manliness. The study, then, productively expands our sense of the importance of Roman models within the Victorian male psyche... Eastlake reminds us that the British envisioned their empire as a new Rome.
Laura Eastlake's elegant monograph weaves together many disparate threads in a clear and persuasive way. It is a pleasure to see visual, ephemeral, political, and literary evidence discussed with equal care. The book has much to offer Classicists and Victorianists in both its level of specificity and its methodology.
There is a high level of originality in this project...the book is extremely rigorous, showing a wide breadth and depth of scholarship and an effective methodology. The author has combed the archives, including letters, magazine and newspaper articles, and a great range of secondary criticism...The case studies, such as that of the reception of the Emperor Nero who was perceived as either monstrous or as an ideal of artistic masculinity, are both fascinating and well-argued.
As an academic project,Ancient Rome and Victorian Masculinityis a massive accomplishment. Eastlake's reach as a scholar of nineteenth-century literature and culture is extensive...
Eastlake's interpretation of Marius the Epicurean, both as a novel and as an intervention into Victorian debates on masculinity, is exemplary; she makes this structurally difficult historical novel relevant to its time and accessible to our own. . . . This is a well-researched, well written, and historically sensitive book. It refuses to fix a single meaning of the Roman world for the Victorians, instead cultivating multiple understandings of both Roman antiquity and Victorian masculinity, as well as their many intersections
it is hard not to enjoy Eastlake's wide reading, her careful choice of sources, her detailed interpretations, her well-chosen illustrations. From the early decades of the nineteenth century, when the Roman ideal seemed to have been monopolised by Napoleon, while Greek imagination and flexibility could be better appropriated in Britain, to the militarising ideologies of turn-of-the-century imperialists, we are taken through a vast range of different and often contradictory interpretations, literary, political and cultural. Distinctly enlightening.
Notă biografică
Laura Eastlake is Senior Lecturer in English Literature at Edge Hill University, having previously taught English and Classics at the University of Glasgow. Her research focuses on nineteenth-century masculinities and how Victorian writers like Wilkie Collins, Anthony Trollope, Rudyard Kipling, and Oscar Wilde used the ancient world to construct different styles of manliness. She has published on decadent masculinities of the fin de siècle and Wilkie Collins's little-known first novel Antonina. She is also the Public Engagement Officer for the Classical Reception Studies Network (CRSN) and an Editor of the Wilkie Collins Journal.