Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Boxed Items
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- 1 English Literature
- SECTION ONE FROM THE RENAISSANCE TO THE RESTORATION
- SECTION TWO FROM THE RESTORATION TO THE ENLIGHTENMENT
- SECTION THREE THE ROMANTIC AGE
- 9 Backgrounds
- 10 Literature of the Romantic Age
- 11 Re-reading the Romantics
- SECTION FOUR THE VICTORIAN AGE
- SECTION FIVE THE MODERN AGE
- Postscript
- Select Bibliography
- Webliography
- Title/Topic Index
- Author Index
11 - Re-reading the Romantics
Colonialism, Romanticism and Disease
from SECTION THREE - THE ROMANTIC AGE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Boxed Items
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- 1 English Literature
- SECTION ONE FROM THE RENAISSANCE TO THE RESTORATION
- SECTION TWO FROM THE RESTORATION TO THE ENLIGHTENMENT
- SECTION THREE THE ROMANTIC AGE
- 9 Backgrounds
- 10 Literature of the Romantic Age
- 11 Re-reading the Romantics
- SECTION FOUR THE VICTORIAN AGE
- SECTION FIVE THE MODERN AGE
- Postscript
- Select Bibliography
- Webliography
- Title/Topic Index
- Author Index
Summary
Alan Bewell's Romanticism and Colonial Disease (1999) is a fascinating re-reading of the contextual and textual discourses of Wordsworth and his fellow poets. Bewell notes that a significant context for the Romantic age was colonial expansion. English ships were travelling all over the world. In India, soon to be Britain's greatest possession, the East India Company had transformed itself from a trading body into a political power after Plassey (1757) and Baksar (1764). The money from these colonies was helping a financially drained British exchequer. Colonies in West Indies and Africa also flourished.
This was only one side of the picture. Many Englishmen died in the colonies. Tropical diseases – to which they had no immunity and to which they were being exposed for the first time – claimed their lives in huge numbers in India, West Indies and Africa. Many died during the lengthy voyages too. This meant that many families in England had lost their family members in the colonies. In terms of writing, this was the period when the first treatises on tropical diseases began to get published and circulated in England. Other countries were also mapped in terms of their medical geography (the incidence of specific diseases in certain geographical areas). In fact, Bewell shows how every single Romantic writer, from Wordsworth to Austen, had at least one family member in the colonies, had a colonial connection, and were often familiar with tropical diseases.
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- Information
- A Short History of English Literature , pp. 232 - 234Publisher: Foundation BooksPrint publication year: 2009