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  5. British Creoles: Nationhood, Identity, and Romantic Geopolitics in Robert Southey’s History of Brazil
 
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British Creoles: Nationhood, Identity, and Romantic Geopolitics in Robert Southey’s History of Brazil

Author(s)
Fermanis, Porscha  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/11326
Date Issued
2019-07-19
Date Available
2020-03-20T12:34:58Z
Abstract
This essay considers the nationalist preoccupations underpinning Robert Southey’s three-volume History of Brazil (1810–1819), maintaining that there are important links between his historiographical practices and his rethinking of British imperialism in relation to the challenges raised by the Peninsular War and Napoleonic France. It argues that Southey’s rejection of many of the discourses associated with European encodings of the imperial frontier—such as climatic determinism, sentimental and stirring descriptions, and conquest narratives—forms part of the emergence of a new legitimatory style of British national historiography. While Southey deflates sublime or heroic tales of discovery and conquest, he nonetheless naturalizes the European experience in Brazil via a latent Anglocentric subtext, simultaneously co-opting the hegemonic tendencies of Spanish/Portuguese imperialism, and representing Britain as a benign colonial power divorced from the violence and cruelty associated with those regimes. As Southey’s Brazilians progress towards independence from Portugal, they are invested with more refined moral sensibilities and peculiarly ‘British’ national qualities, making their drift towards emancipation a vindication of a superior British colonial culture. Southey thus uses Brazil as a complex geopolitical space with which to examine a number of his most pressing national concerns, including his fears regarding French imperialism, his residual support for anti-slavery and emancipatory movements, his faith in British expansionism and missionary interventionism, his understanding of the British national character, and his endorsement of new models of ethnic and civic nationalism pioneered in South America.
Sponsorship
European Commission Horizon 2020
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Journal
The Review of English Studies
Volume
71
Issue
299
Start Page
307
End Page
327
Copyright (Published Version)
2019 the Authors
Subjects

Robert Southey

History of Brazil

South America

Peninsular War

National history

Histriography

Imperialism

Nationalism

DOI
10.1093/res/hgz068
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0034-6551
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/
File(s)
No Thumbnail Available
Name

Southey History of Brazil Accepted Version.doc

Size

145 KB

Format

Unknown

Checksum (MD5)

b91d399865c618c1ce0fc139ceb3efae

Owning collection
English, Drama & Film Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
All other content is subject to copyright.

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