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The Colonial Conan Doyle British Imperialism, Irish Nationalism, and the Gothic
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Book Code: GM2005
ISBN: 0-313-32005-5
ISBN-13: 978-0-313-32005-7
224 pages, figures
Greenwood Press
Publication: 7/30/2002
List Price: $98.95 (UK Sterling Price: £57.95)
Availability: Out of stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Also Available: Ebook
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects:
Series Title: Contributions to the Study of World Literature
Series Number: 114
Reviews:
  • The Colonial Conan Doyle not only helps us to rethink one writer's relation to empire, but it should also encourage us to reconsider with more nuance literature's relation to empire. Those relations are too often stymied by oversimplifications; Catherine Wynne's work should help us to see that such dealings are never so elementary as they may first appear.
    —English Literature in Transition 1880-1920
    2005
  • Do Irish matters haunt Doyle's fiction as Wynne claims? They do, and she deserves every credit for revealing the extent of their leavening force.
    —Victorian Studies
    Summer 2004
  • [W]ynne convincingly traces the tensions in Doyle's makeup, which are reflected in his oevure, and their embeddedness in a particular historical context. Her book offers a fresh perspective on an author usually remembered for his detective fiction and adventure stories.
    —The International Fiction Review
    2004
Description: Arthur Conan Doyle is often perceived as the quintessential Englishman, patriotically devoted to the Crown and the empire's defender and apologist. But such a relegation is both limiting and simplistic. Born in Scotland to Irish Catholic parents, Doyle's heritage is complex. His paternal grandfather, John Doyle, had originally left Ireland for London in the early 19th century; his father was committed to the cause of Irish separatism; and his uncle resigned from his position as main cartoonist for Punch after the journal launched an attack on the Pope. Consequently, British imperialism, Irish nationalism, and Catholic allegiance converge uneasily in his works. This book examines the resulting tensions between imperialism and colonialism in his writings. It argues that his thematic obsessions with topography, race, psyche, and sexuality stem from his ambivalence toward his own heritage. The volume repositions Doyle and redresses current critical approaches that have seen him solely as the advocate of empire and have ignored his colonial background. It explores how his fictions occur within a colonial context, the complexity of which is evident in gothic tropes of shifting landscapes, disguised criminalities, spiritualism, and sexual anomalies and conflicts.
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction
  • Imperial War and Colonial Sedition: Soldiers, Mollies, and Fenians
  • Colonial Topographies: Bogs, Moors, and Shifting Grounds
  • Libidinal Encounters and Imperial Resistance: Knight Errant and Aberrant Serpent
  • Empty House and Psychic Landscape: Spiritualism, Mesmerism, and Fairies
  • Afterword
  • Bibliography
  • Index
LC Card Number: 2001058344
LCC Class: PR4624
Dewey Class: 823
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