
The Forms of Informal Empire
Britain, Latin America, and Nineteenth-Century Literature
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
An ambitious comparative study of British and Latin American literature produced across a century of economic colonization.
Winner of the Sonya Rudikoff Prize by the Northeast Victorian Studies Association
Spanish colonization of Latin America came to an end in the early nineteenth century as, one by one, countries from Bolivia to Chile declared their independence. But soon another empire exerted control over the region through markets and trade dealingsāBritain. Merchants, developers, and politicians seized on the opportunity to bring the newly independent nations under the sway of British financial power, subjecting them to an informal empire that lasted into the twentieth century.
In The Forms of Informal Empire, Jessie Reeder reveals that this economic imperial control was founded on an audacious conceptual paradox: that Latin America should simultaneously be both free and unfree. As a result, two of the most important narrative tropes of empireāprogress and familyāgrew strained under the contradictory logic of an informal empire. By reading a variety of texts in English and Spanishāincluding Simón BolĆvar's letters and essays, poetry by Anna Laetitia Barbauld, and novels by Anthony Trollope and Vicente Fidel LópezāReeder challenges the conventional wisdom that informal empire was simply an extension of Britain's vast formal empire. In her compelling formalist account of the structures of imperial thought, informal empire emerges as a divergent, intractable concept throughout the nineteenth-century Atlantic world.
The Forms of Informal Empire goes where previous studies of informal empire and the British nineteenth century have not, offering nuanced and often surprising close readings of British and Latin American texts in their original languages. Reeder's comparative approach provides a new vision of imperial power and makes a forceful case for expanding the archive of British literary studies.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction. Freedom and Empire in the Nineteenth Century
- Part I: Progress and Informal Empire, 1808ā1875: Sequence, Protagonist, Paradox
- Part II: Family and Informal Empire, 1840ā1926: Origin, Generation, Relation, Hybridity
- Coda
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index