Englishness and National CultureIn this highly engaging book, Antony Easthope examines 'Englishness' as a form and a series of shared discourses. Discussing the subject of 'nation' - a growing area in literary and cultural studies - Easthope offers polemical arguments written in a lively and accessible style. Englishness and National Culture asserts a profound and unacknowledged continuity between the seventeenth century and today. It argues that contemporary journalists, historians, novelists, poets and comedians continue to speak through the voice of a long-standing empiricist tradition. |
From inside the book
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... Question of National Culture: Thinking about Englishness' in Moving the Borders, edited by Marialuisa Bignami and Caroline Patey (Milan: Unicopli, 1996); and 'Culture and Nation: Englishness' in Litteraria Pragensia/Perspectives, edited ...
... Question of National Culture: Thinking about Englishness' in Moving the Borders, edited by Marialuisa Bignami and Caroline Patey (Milan: Unicopli, 1996); and 'Culture and Nation: Englishness' in Litteraria Pragensia/Perspectives, edited ...
Page 11
... questions of the nature of collective identity issuing in nation or the difficulties that must arise from the presumed difference between nation as 'real' (equated with 'territorial space') and nation as 'imaginary' (inhabiting ...
... questions of the nature of collective identity issuing in nation or the difficulties that must arise from the presumed difference between nation as 'real' (equated with 'territorial space') and nation as 'imaginary' (inhabiting ...
Page 12
... question of the individual subject; but you won't have a social science until you solve this very question' (1993, p. 139). The double bind he's pointing to is that the social sciences, including history, have generally established ...
... question of the individual subject; but you won't have a social science until you solve this very question' (1993, p. 139). The double bind he's pointing to is that the social sciences, including history, have generally established ...
Page 13
... question of subjectivity; but how can these disciplines continue to claim status as science or systematic knowledge while ignoring a question they can't escape? All those who address nation, that crucial and problematic formation of ...
... question of subjectivity; but how can these disciplines continue to claim status as science or systematic knowledge while ignoring a question they can't escape? All those who address nation, that crucial and problematic formation of ...
Page 19
... question that any individual subject's identification would ever be even or completed. Identity and discourse In default of a viable conception of the subject as self-unfolding, self- discovering and - ultimately - self-constituting ...
... question that any individual subject's identification would ever be even or completed. Identity and discourse In default of a viable conception of the subject as self-unfolding, self- discovering and - ultimately - self-constituting ...
Contents
15 | |
National desire | 55 |
Empiricism in English philosophy | 61 |
An empiricist tradition | 87 |
The discourse of literary journalism | 117 |
The discourse of historywriting | 135 |
English tragedy English comedy | 153 |
Contemporary English poetry | 177 |
identity and difference | 200 |
Bibliography | 230 |
Index | 241 |
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Common terms and phrases
actually analysis appears argues argument become believe body called cited claim collective comes common consists constituted constructed contemporary continuity contrast criticism culture defined desire direct discourse discussion effect empirical empiricism empiricist empiricist discourse England English example exist experience expression fact feeling figures force give given Guardian historian historical Hobbes human idea identification imagined individual irony kind knowledge language less literary literature Locke look Marxism matter meaning metaphor mind narrative national identity nature never object opposition original particular past philosophic play pleasure poem poetry political position possible present principle produce question reader reading reality reason refers reflection relation represented rhetoric says sense showing signifier simply social society speak structure style theory things thought tion tradition truth turn universal writing