Available Formats
The Constitution of English Literature: The State, the Nation and the Canon
By (Author) Professor Michael Gardiner
By (author) Professor Michael Gardiner
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
18th July 2013
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Biography, Literature and Literary studies
Social and cultural history
Constitution: government and the state
Social theory
Political science and theory
820.935841
Hardback
168
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open Access programme and is available on www.bloomsburycollections.com. In this extended essay, Michael Gardiner examines the ideology of the discipline of English Literature in the light of the serious redefining work on England and Englishness that has been conducted in Political Studies in the last decade. He argues that English Literature emerges from the development of the state and that consequently it has suppressed the idea of the nation. His claim is that English Literature has lost its form since its methodology and canonicity depended so heavily on a constitutional form which can no longer be defended. He calls upon those working in English Literature to recognise that they are not really participating in the same discipline, defined by the Burkean constitutional settlement, even if they think of themselves as writing 'within the canon'. His view is that a lack of appreciation of 'hard-edged' political factors have led to a 'continuant' and regressive form of English Literature which tends to hang on to stifling methodologies. In its place, he appeals for the creation of a more open-ended, inclusive, internationalist, and comparative 'literature of England'.
Michael Gardiner is Professor of English and Comparative Literary Studies at the University of Warwick, UK. His books include The Cultural Roots of Devolution (2004), From Trocchi to Trainspotting: Scottish Critical Theory since 1960 (2007) and At the Edge of Empire: The Life of Thomas B. Glover (2008).