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Abstract

Research in Medical & Engineering Sciences

Tracing Colonialism in 19th Century British Novels

  • Open or Close Farhana Haque*

    Department of English and Humanities, Brac University, Bangladesh

    *Corresponding author: Farhana Haque, Department of Arts and Humanities, Brac University, Bangladesh

Submission: September 09, 2017; Published: November 08, 2017

DOI: 10.31031/RMES.2017.02.000531

ISSN : 2576-8816
Volume2 Issue2

Abstract

The aim of this paper is to map out aspects of colonialism and embedded colonial spirit in the works of the Nineteenth century British novelists. To do so i have chosen three quintessential english novels, jane austen’s mans field park (1814), charlotte bronte’s jane eyre (1847), and its prequel wide sargasso sea (1966) written by jean rhys. These three novels from three different eras, the romantic period, the victorian period and the postcolonial modern times, therefore illustrated how literature can often be ingrained with supremacist ideologies and it can also be the means of resistance against the forces of colonialism. For example, in the novels jane eyre and mans field park we have seen how the identity of the colonizer was created with the help of the colonial money and how english imperial identity relied on the property earned through the means of slave trade in the caribbean islands. If we trace the history of british imperialism we could see the expansion of british colonies that were parallel with the british concern for a national identity, arising mostly in the eighteenth century. With the colonization of the caribbean islands and other subsequent british satellites, identity within the british empire became even more complex. This reinforced the need for a distinction to be made between the multicultural, colonized british subjects and the racially, culturally and religiously homogenous britons who possessed the coveted “englishness”. Such idea of english superiority found its voice in the narratives of english novels, especially in those which were written during the romantic and the victorian period, primetime for the british imperial conquest. Given my aim of tracing colonial predisposition and resistance through literature i have designed my paper into three segments, each examining one novel. First part of this paper will examine bronte’s jane eyre and the next segment will shed further lights on this novel along with its post colonial counterpart, jean rhy’s wide sargasso sea. These essential segments will analyses the cultural hierarchies present in both texts and will explore the contested nature and meaning of ‘englishness’ throughout the narrative of the colonizer (jane eyre) and the colonized body (wide sargasso sea). While bronte’s text constructed the definition of englishness by juxtaposing english characters against the colonial other, where as rhy’s text will tried to fight against bronte’s cultural hierarchy while simultaneously colluding with the colonial project. The last part of my paper will analyses mansfield park which will take my discussion further on the issues of identity earned by slave trade. This study will discern how the colonial projects can be occupied by the english novels, informs authorial choices and complicates past readings.

Keywords: Colonialism; Post colonialism; Supremacist’s ideologies; Victorian period; Romantic period; Postcolonial modern time

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