Orientalism in the Victorian Era

dc.citation.epage89en_US
dc.citation.spage1en_US
dc.contributor.authorKennedy, Valerieen_US
dc.contributor.editorRabinowitz, P.
dc.date.accessioned2019-05-29T07:45:12Z
dc.date.available2019-05-29T07:45:12Z
dc.date.issued2017en_US
dc.departmentDepartment of English Language and Literatureen_US
dc.description.abstractOrientalism in the Victorian era has origins in three aspects of 18th-century European and British culture: first, the fascination with The Arabian Nights (translated into French by Antoine Galland in 1704), which was one of the first works to have purveyed to Western Europe the image of the Orient as a place of wonders, wealth, mystery, intrigue, romance, and danger; second, the Romantic visions of the Orient as represented in the works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Percy Bysshe Shelley, George Gordon, Lord Byron, and other Romantics as well as in Thomas Moore’s Lalla Rookh; and third, the domestication of opium addiction in Thomas de Quincey’s Confessions of an English Opium Eater. Victorian Orientalism was all pervasive: it is prominent in fiction by William Thackeray, the Brontë sisters, Charles Dickens, Wilkie Collins, Joseph Conrad, and Rudyard Kipling, but is also to be found in works by Benjamin Disraeli, George Eliot, Oscar Wilde, and Robert Louis Stevenson, among others. In poetry Edward Fitzgerald’s Rubaiyat is a key text, but many works by Alfred Tennyson and Robert Browning also show the influence of Orientalist tropes and ideas. In theater it is one of the constant strands of much popular drama and other forms of popular entertainment like panoramas and pageants, while travel writing from Charles Kingsley to Richard Burton, James Anthony Froude, and Mary Kingsley shows a wide variety of types of Orientalist figures and concepts, as do many works of both popular and children’s literature. Underlying and uniting all these diverse manifestations of Victorian Orientalism is the imperialist philosophy articulated by writers as different as Thomas Carlyle, John Stuart Mill, and Karl Marx, supported by writings of anthropologists and race theorists such as James Cowles Pritchard and Robert Knox. Toward the end of the Victorian era, the image of the opium addict and the Chinese opium den in the East End of London or in the Orient itself becomes a prominent trope in fiction by Dickens, Wilde, and Kipling, and can be seen to lead to the proliferation of Oriental villains in popular fiction of the early 20th century by such writers as M. P. Shiel, Guy Boothby, and Sax Rohmer, whose Dr. Fu Manchu becomes the archetypal version of such figures.en_US
dc.description.provenanceSubmitted by Evrim Ergin (eergin@bilkent.edu.tr) on 2019-05-29T07:45:12Z No. of bitstreams: 1 Orientalism_in_the_Victorian_Era.pdf: 739001 bytes, checksum: 4957f5ea01bd3eba0ee0e49f37dc32bf (MD5)en
dc.description.provenanceMade available in DSpace on 2019-05-29T07:45:12Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Orientalism_in_the_Victorian_Era.pdf: 739001 bytes, checksum: 4957f5ea01bd3eba0ee0e49f37dc32bf (MD5) Previous issue date: 2017en
dc.identifier.doi10.1093/acrefore/9780190201098.013.226en_US
dc.identifier.eisbn9780190201098
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11693/51937
dc.language.isoEnglishen_US
dc.publisherOxford University Pressen_US
dc.relation.ispartofOxford research encyclopedia of literatureen_US
dc.relation.isversionofhttps://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190201098.013.226en_US
dc.subjectthe Orienten_US
dc.subjectthe Easten_US
dc.subjectImperialismen_US
dc.subjectEmpireen_US
dc.subjectExoticismen_US
dc.subjectFantasyen_US
dc.subjectStereotypesen_US
dc.subjectOpiumen_US
dc.subjectOrientalismen_US
dc.titleOrientalism in the Victorian Eraen_US
dc.typeBook Chapteren_US

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