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Naval Impressment in Tobias Smollett's Roderick Random
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 July 2014
Extract
In his discussion of Joseph Conrad's fiction in The Political Unconscious Fredric Jameson writes:
the sea is the empty space between the concrete places of work and life; but it is also, just as surely, itself a place of work and the very element by which an imperial capitalism draws its scattered beachheads and outposts together, through which it slowly realizes its sometimes violent, sometimes silent and corrosive, penetration of the outlying precapitalist zones of the globe.
This linkage of the sea with capitalism allows Jameson to deal with Conrad's novels (especially Lord Jim and Nostromo) as, to use Jameson's own phrase, socially symbolic acts—the sea is “the privileged place of the strategy of containment” and it provides Conrad a laboratory where “human relations can be presented in all their ideal formal purity.” Jameson has identified nautical fiction's important place in any story of the novel—the confining (yet paradoxically freeing) nature of the sea (and the ship) screens out the extraneous material of the world, forcing confrontation, laying bare power relations and allowing the writer to focus on the human condition. The sea allows for only the essentials: clearly defined hierarchies, and life and death on easy terms. Jameson links Conrad with high modernism and thus with capitalism, but his positioning of the sea in relation to power and history can be, I believe, “read back” and then applied (in a necessarily nascent form) to the literary sea of the eighteenth century.
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References
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14 The single best account of Oglethorpe's long association with English anti-impressment agitators can be found in Woods, John A.' essay “The City of London and Impressment 1776–1777” in The Proceedings of the Leeds Philosophical and Historical Society VII (12 1956): 111–27Google Scholar. The irony of impressed sailors fighting to preserve English freedoms is dramatized in dozens of eighteenth-century ballads: see, for example, Palmer, RoyThe Oxford Book of Sea Songs (New York, 1986)Google Scholar and Dugaw, DianeWarrior Women and Popular Balladry, 1650–1850 (Cambridge, 1989)Google Scholar. The lively eighteenth-century sub-genre of nautical autobiography often features sailors musing on their burden. Excellent examples of this phenomenon appear in Records of Conscience: Three Auto-biographical Narratives by Conscientious Objectors 1665–1865, ed. Brock, Peter (New York, 1993)Google Scholar, Kelly, SamuelAn Eighteenth-Century Seaman (New York, 1925)Google Scholar and Nagle, Jacob, The Nagle Journal, ed. Dann, John C. (New York, 1988)Google Scholar.
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54 Beasley claims that Smollett's account of the horrors of eighteenth-century sailing life is still considered “one of the most graphic and authentic we possess.” (Beasley, Jerry C., “Smollett's Art: The Novel as ‘Picture,’” in The First English Novelists: Essays in Understanding, ed. Armistead, J. M. [Knoxville, 1985], p. 145)Google Scholar.
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59 Colley, Linda, Britons: Forging the Nation 1707–1837 (New Haven, 1992), p. 65Google Scholar. Colley is correct that the Admiralty did not actively seek out landmen_when it was recruiting, but her adverb “rarely” is perhaps too strong. Daniel A. Baugh notes that in one particular mobilization in the summer of 1739, a nine-ship fleet, manned through a combination of volunteers and the press, contained 21% landmen. (“The Eighteenth Century Navy as a national Institution, 1690–1815,” in The Oxford Illustrated History of the Royal Navy, ed. Hill, J. R. [New York, 1995], p. 138)Google Scholar. Colley makes only one other brief reference to impressment, noting that it was “the element or arbitrary compulsion” that caused protest riots late in the eighteenth century (p. 303). Colley is right that the “black legends” are exaggerated in first half of the century, but the growth of the Royal Navy was so dramatic by the 1790s that Colley's use of mid-eighteenth-century statistics on naval manning to suggest a general condition for the years covered by her study is somewhat misleading.
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62 According to Bouce, “some 6,500 copies of Roderick Randomcame off Strahan's presses from January 1748 to November 1749.” By 1770 the novel had gone through eight editions (“Introduction,” p. xiv).
63 Fielding, Henry, The History of Tom Jones, A Foundling, ed. by Bender, John and Stern, Simon (Oxford, 1996), p. 761Google Scholar.
64 McKeon, , Origins of the English Novel, p. 410Google Scholar.
65 Bakhtin, , The Dialogic Imagination, p. 15Google Scholar.
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