Description
Extremely well written and very persuasive in suggesting how the discourses of sympathetic identification work to reinscribe various forms of social, gender, and imperial difference. While there are numerous studies devoted to the literary construction of sentimental selfhood in the eighteenth century and a rapidly growing body of work on the genesis of the British empire, no other critic has argued so convincingly for a dialectical approach to the relationship between sentimental texts and the larger sociocultural effects of imperial designs and operations. -- Robert Markley, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign With considerable verve and tenacity, Lynn Festa demonstrates that the sentimental mode in the eighteenth century was inextricable from the colonial beginnings of empire. The flinty lightness of Festa's readings cannily resembles the subtlety and style of the varied examples she deftly analyzes, from the snuffbox in Sterne's A Sentimental Journey to the perorations in Raynal's History of the Two Indies. By documenting how writers during the period ventriloquize ostensibly mute slaves as well as inanimate objects, Festa shows how sentimentalism challenged-and also extended-the reach of empire. By plumbing the complexity of eighteenth-century mercantilist and abolitionist discourses, this study breaks new ground in the scholarship about sentimentalism. -- Srinivas Aravamudan, Duke University Thoughtful, witty, and brimming over with insight and information, Sentimental Figures of Empire offers the best explanation I know of how and why the language of sentimentalism became the preferred idiom for both vindicating and critiquing Europeans' colonial activities. Scholars of Enlightenment philosophy, of abolitionism, of the French and British novel will all benefit from-and be moved by-this rich account of sympathy's global travels during the long eighteenth century. -- Deidre Shauna Lynch, Indiana University
About the Author
Lynn Festa is the Gardner Cowles Associate Professor of English at Harvard University.
Reviews
Thoroughly researched and densely annotated, this is a book for scholars of 18th century literature, culture, society, and ideas. Choice 2007 Festa's supple prose serves her well... She is capable both of the judicious concession... and the head-on confrontation. -- Deidre Lynch Studies in English Literature 2007 Engaging and erudite book. -- Jennifer Pitts American Historical Review 2008 There is great originality in this book, and even where we find what oft was thought, it's rarely so well expressed. -- Cynthia Wall Eighteenth-Century Life 2009 As a comparative cultural history, Professor Festa's study offers a sound and especially persuasive argument for researching from the early modern era the emerging social relationships between the self and the objectified other in relation to empire, whether in the sentimental novel or elsewhere. -- Christine Clark-Evans Comparative Literature Studies 2008 Most memorable for unearthing the volatile politics of the sentimental form. -- Roxann Wheeler Scriblerian 2008 Festa's account of the shortcomings (and the strengths) of imperialist benevolence in the eighteenth century is unusually deft and lucid. -- Carolyn Vellenga Berman Novel 2007 Sentimental Figures is, put simply, a terrific book, and perhaps most especially so in the willingness of its author, Lynn Festa, to consider groundbreaking subject matter... in at once theoretically astute and historically nuanced ways. -- Abby L. Coykendall 1650-1850: Ideas, Aesthetics and Inquiries 2008 A beautifully written and compellingly argued book about 'the margins of the Enlightenment.' -- Cynthia Wall Eighteenth-Century Life 2009 A remarkable scholarly and theoretical achievement... original and powerful. Eighteenth-Century Fiction 2010
Book Information
ISBN 9780801884306
Author Lynn Festa
Format Hardback
Page Count 312
Imprint Johns Hopkins University Press
Publisher Johns Hopkins University Press
Weight(grams) 567g
Dimensions(mm) 229mm * 152mm * 23mm