Book contents
- The Nation in British Literature and Culture
- Cambridge Themes in British Literature and Culture
- The Nation in British Literature and Culture
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Part I Origins
- Part II Writing the Nation
- Chapter 6 Cultural Borrowings
- Chapter 7 Tradition and Transformation in Literature
- Chapter 8 Milton and National Exceptionalism
- Part III Revolutions and Empires
- Part IV Making the Modern Nation
- Part V Futures
- Index
Chapter 6 - Cultural Borrowings
from Part II - Writing the Nation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 July 2023
- The Nation in British Literature and Culture
- Cambridge Themes in British Literature and Culture
- The Nation in British Literature and Culture
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Part I Origins
- Part II Writing the Nation
- Chapter 6 Cultural Borrowings
- Chapter 7 Tradition and Transformation in Literature
- Chapter 8 Milton and National Exceptionalism
- Part III Revolutions and Empires
- Part IV Making the Modern Nation
- Part V Futures
- Index
Summary
This chapter situates the sixteenth-century drive to define ’Englishness’ through literature within a broader European context, charting the widespread efforts to reify ’national character’ through the production of standardised grammars for vernaculars and assertions of their peculiar grace. After surveying early modern thought on the relationship between language, nation and empire, the chapter discusses the particular strategy adopted by English writers (centrally Puttenham and Sidney) to establish the very peripheral barbarousness of the English tongue as a proof of its distinction, before pointing at the close towards the emerging role of empire in underpinning notions of Englishness.
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- The Nation in British Literature and Culture , pp. 107 - 121Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023