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A Taste for China Eugenia Zuroski Jenkins (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, McMaster University)

A Taste for China By Eugenia Zuroski Jenkins (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, McMaster University)

Summary

Through an examination of England's obsession with Chinese things throughout the long eighteenth century, this book argues that chinoiserie in literature and material culture played a central role in shaping emergent conceptions of taste and subjectivity.

A Taste for China Summary

A Taste for China: English Subjectivity and the Prehistory of Orientalism by Eugenia Zuroski Jenkins (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, McMaster University)

Through an examination of England's obsession with Chinese things throughout the long eighteenth century, this book argues that chinoiserie in literature and material culture played a central role in shaping emergent conceptions of taste and subjectivity. In the wake of recent scholarship in the field of eighteenth-century writing that examines English identity and nationalism in the context of trade, commodity culture, and the social role of literature, this study demonstrates how the figure of the Chinese object was variously deployed throughout the period to authorize new epistemologies and subject-object relations, ultimately redefining what it meant to be English. The book opens with a reading of Mary Wortley Montagu's Turkish Embassy Letters that contextualizes the accumulation of imported material goods from China as part of the process by which early modern English nationalism gave way to a more commercial notion of English identity. Jenkins then considers the appearance of chinoiserie in English writing that ranges from Pepys' diaries to Restoration drama. Subsequent chapters consider international commerce and the Far East in Daniel Defoe's under-studied novel, Captain Singleton, and the relationship between subjects and objects in Pope's The Rape of Lock. Broadly considered, A Taste for China shows that prior to the nineteenth century, English culture did not necessarily organize the world in terms of the orientalist binary, defined by Edward Said. By historicizing British orientalism, Jenkins reveals how the notion of the East as anathema to English identity is produced through various competing models of subjectivity over the course of the eighteenth century.

A Taste for China Reviews

A Taste for China insists that we continue to query the parameters of eighteenth-century Britishness, and in its impressive range of readings, succeeds in making China a pedagogical imperative for the teaching of eighteenthcentury fiction. * Eighteenth-Century Fiction *

About Eugenia Zuroski Jenkins (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, McMaster University)

Eugenia Jenkins is Assistant Professor of English and Cultural Studies at McMaster University

Table of Contents

List of Figures ; Acknowledgements ; Introduction: "China" and The Prehistory of Orientalism ; Chapter 1: The Cosmopolitan Nation, "Where Order in Variety We See" ; Chapter 2: The Chinese Touchstone of the Tasteful Imagination ; Chapter 3: Defoe's Trinkets: Fiction's Spectral Traffic ; Chapter 4: "Nature to Advantage Drest": The Poetry of Subjectivity ; Chapter 5: How Chinese Things Became Oriental ; Chapter 6: Disenchanting China: Orientalism and the English Novel ; Afterword: Rethinking Modern Taste

Additional information

GOR013665117
9780199950980
0199950989
A Taste for China: English Subjectivity and the Prehistory of Orientalism by Eugenia Zuroski Jenkins (Assistant Professor, Assistant Professor, McMaster University)
Used - Very Good
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
2013-05-23
304
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - A Taste for China