posted on 2024-11-14, 16:39authored byLouise D'Arcens, Chris Jones
Comparing nineteenth-century British and Australian Anglo-Saxonist literature enables a "decentered" exploration of Anglo-Saxonism's intersections with national, imperial, and colonial discourses, challenging assumptions that this discourse was an uncritical vehicle of English nationalism and British manifest destiny. Far from reflecting a stable imperial center, evocations of "ancient Englishness" in British literature were polyvalent and self-contesting, while in Australian literature they offered a response to colonization and emerging knowledge about the vast age of Indigenous Australian cultures.
History
Citation
D'Arcens, L. and Jones, C. (2013). Excavating the borders of literary anglo-saxonism in nineteenth-century Britain and Australia. Representations, 121 (1), 85-106.