Description
About the Author
Nathan K. Hensley is Assistant Professor of English at Georgetown University, where he also co-directs the Modernities Working Group. His writing has appeared in Victorian Studies, Novel: A Forum on Fiction, Victorian Periodicals Review, The Stanford Arcade, and other venues.
Reviews
forms of Empire's attention to the violence that lies at the heart of liberalism is an important intervention and has the capacity to significantly reshape the field and, in particular, studies of liberalism. * Zarena Aslami, Michigan State University, Victorian Literature and Culture *
Hensley presents a powerful intellect and a lucid voice on the scholarly scene. * Regenia Gagnier, Novel: A Forum on Fiction *
The forms of Nathan Hensley's Forms of Empire: The Poetics of Victorian Sovereignty are not just sociopolitical but also literary constructs, and it is Hensley's use of form to forge connections between literature and liberal law that is the most striking feature of this book ... Original in its method, Forms of Empire also provides striking and original readings of the texts it treats. * Andrea Henderson, Studies in English Literature *
A gripping, at times formidable, study that consistently and inventively gauges the depth to which in Victorian Britain the liberal state (of mind, of nationhood) was infused by its reprobated and ostensibly superseded opposite: the infliction of brutal violence on subjected bodies around the imperial globe ... This book is going to get noticed. * Herbert Tucker, John C. Coleman Professor of English, University of Virginia, author of Epic: Britain's Heroic M use, 1790-1910 *
While Forms of Empire's most obvious contribution to the field is its utterly convincing picture of the indelible relationship between empire and Victorian literature, and between violence and liberalism, the books dedication to keeping the fraught histories and persistent blindspots of our methodologies in view is an important part of the way it intervenes in the liberal triumphalism that is, too often, our unacknowledged Victorian inheritance. * Tanya Agathocleous, V21: Victorian Studies for the 21st Century *
Well written, bracingly argued, replete with insights, the book is a significant achievement. * James Buzard, Journal of British Studies *
Hensley manages to keep multiple strains of thought going simultaneously, such that reading Forms of Empire is like listening to music on a dozen different channels. Hardly any other critic can achieve such an ambitiously impressive stereophonic analysis. * Talia Schaffer, author of Romance's Rival: Familiar Marriage in Victorian Fiction *
... Now Lauren Goodlad and Nathan Hensley offer two new ways of understanding Victorian society's commitment to expansion, conquest, and domination, and Victorian literature's commitment to staying at home ... specialists in the Victorian era -- like Goodlad and Hensley -- have shown us a great deal about the way its literature reflects upon imperialism without ever going to the colonies. * Nasser Mufti, Review 19 *
A masterful and beautifully written book of commanding scope, Hensleys Forms of Empire posits a new method of reading the Victorian periods, and more broadly liberalisms, constitutive antimony: the intimate, scandalous intertwinement of violence and law (9) * Victorian Studies for the 21st Century *
Stunningly smart and erudite, Forms of Empire convincingly argues that violence necessarily constitutes the other face of liberal modernity. Not only does Nathan Hensley probe the very logic of empire, but, in so doing, he also proffers an incisive meditation on contemporary habits and assumptions of literary criticism. That the book pulls these different threads together with rigor as well as elegance is but one example of its brilliance. Forms of Empire is a spectacular achievement. * Sukanya Banerjee, author of Becoming Imperial Citizens: Indians in the Late-Victorian Empire *
Forms of Empire is gratifying in its determination to put not only empire but the violence upon which it depends at the center of Victorian literature and the critical project of Victorian studies * Tanya Agathocleous, Victorian Studies for the 21st Century *
The book is filled with rich, illuminating writing, informed equally by rigorous archival research and sensitive close readings ... Hensleys innovative contribution is a deft amalgam of surface-oriented close reading, sensitive to the present while grounded in history * Zach Fruit, Victorian Studies for the 21st Century *
Book Information
ISBN 9780198792451
Author Nathan K. Hensley
Format Hardback
Page Count 326
Imprint Oxford University Press
Publisher Oxford University Press
Dimensions(mm) 223mm * 143mm * 22mm