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£44.99

Mutual (In)Comprehensions

France and Britain in the Long Nineteenth Century
Edited By: Rosemary Mitchell

£44.99

This collection of essays explores the complex relationship between France and Britain in the nineteenth century. With both admiration and anxiety, each nation used its “best enemy” to shape its own national identity through art, literature, and history.

This collection of essays by French and British humanities scholars explores the complex relationship between the two nations in the long nineteenth century. Both countries…
£44.99
£44.99
1-4438-4777-1 , , , ,
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This collection of essays by French and British humanities scholars explores the complex relationship between the two nations in the long nineteenth century. Both countries contemplated the other with admiration and anxiety, using their best enemy to shape their own national identities.

Mutual (In)Comprehensions is unique in the range of its coverage, which includes artistic, literary, economic, educational, social, and historical interpretations, interactions, and appropriations. British railway engineers consider the character of the French railway worker; a French illustrator portrays with disturbing insight the social divisions of Victorian London; British agricultural writers find cause for reflection in the condition of the French peasantry; and an English Anglo-Catholic considers the lessons for her church in the history of post-Reformation French Catholicism. French architects discover something to admire in the British Gothic Revival, while geographical societies on both sides of the Channel exhibit a spirit of international co-operation.

Including the work of both established academics and young scholars, the collection demonstrates the significance of Franco-British interactions over the long nineteenth century, and shows that – as ever – British culture can only be fully understood within a Continental framework, and vice versa. This volume will appeal to scholars of Victorian culture, in particular French and British nineteenth-century literature and art, as well as to academics interested in the development of national identities and international cultural relations.

Rosemary Mitchell is Reader in Victorian Studies and Director of the Leeds Centre for Victorian Studies at Leeds Trinity University, West Yorkshire. She is author of Picturing the Past: English History in Text and Image, 1830-1870 (2000), and has also published articles in Nineteenth-Century Contexts, Clio, and Women’s History Review, and has written nearly 150 entries for The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004).

Isabelle Avila, Francoise Baillet, Odile Boucher-Rivalain, Zineb Bouizem, Claire Carles-Huguet, Diane Drummond, Juliette Pochat, Karen Sayer, Arkiya Touadi, Rosemary Mitchell, Nathalie Vanfasse

Hardback

  • ISBN: 1-4438-4777-1
  • ISBN13: 978-1-4438-4777-3
  • Date of Publication: 2013-10-09

Ebook

  • ISBN: 1-4438-5080-2
  • ISBN13: 978-1-4438-5080-3
  • Date of Publication: 2013-10-09

Subject Codes:

  • BIC: AC, DS, HBTB
  • THEMA: AGA, DS, NHTB
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  • "This provocative, wide-ranging collection explores many influences that ultimately shaped British and French national and global identities in the period. What unites this seemingly disparate group of articles lies in how convincingly they demonstrate the extent to which Britain and France really needed their (often competitive) counterpart “other”. […] The comprehensive introduction provides helpful historical and critical frameworks for the thirteen articles that follow. In turn, each article presents insightful analysis of well-chosen encounters, influences, and/or cultural appropriations. […] These effective scholarly models should encourage further continental studies while providing academics with guidance in teaching intercultural and interdisciplinary approaches and methodologies to undergraduate and graduate students."
    - Ann Frank Wake Professor, Elmhurst College