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The Making of an Imperial Polity

The Making of an Imperial Polity

The Making of an Imperial Polity

Civility and America in the Jacobean Metropolis
Lauren Working, University of Oxford
January 2020
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9781108494069
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    Bringing to life the interaction between America, its peoples, and metropolitan gentlemen in early seventeenth-century England, this book argues that colonization did not just operate on the peripheries of the political realm, and confronts the entangled histories of colonialism and domestic status and governance. The Jacobean era is reframed as a definitive moment in which the civil self-presentation of the elite increasingly became implicated in the imperial. The tastes and social lives of statesmen contributed to this shift in the English political gaze. At the same time, bringing English political civility in dialogue with Native American beliefs and practices speaks to inherent tensions in the state's civilizing project and the pursuit of refinement through empire. This significant reassessment of Jacobean political culture reveals how colonizing America transformed English civility and demonstrates how metropolitan politics and social relations were uniquely shaped by territorial expansion beyond the British Isles. This title is also available as Open Access.

    • Offers a significant reassessment of Jacobean political culture that collapses the divide between early colonial history and metropolitan politics
    • Provides an interdisciplinary approach to Jacobean political culture, combining archaeological, anthropological and textual approaches
    • This title is also available as Open Access

    Awards

    Joint winner, RHS Whitfield Prize - British and Irish History, Royal Historical Society

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    Reviews & endorsements

    '… this book contributes to the body of scholarship on early modern civility.' Janine Boldt, H-Nationalism

    'This is an important book, well researched and clearly written that will spark many scholarly conversations.' Abigail L. Swingen, Early American Literature

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    Product details

    January 2020
    Hardback
    9781108494069
    266 pages
    235 × 157 × 18 mm
    0.51kg
    8 b/w illus.
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction
    • 1. Cultivation and the American project
    • 2. Colony as microcosm: Virginia and the metropolis
    • 3. Cannibalism and the politics of bloodshed
    • 4. Tobacco, consumption, and imperial intent
    • 5. Wit, sociability, and empire
    • Conclusion.
      Author
    • Lauren Working , University of Oxford

      Lauren Working is Research Associate on the ERC-funded TIDE project (Travel, Transculturality, and Identity in England, 1550–1700) at the University of Oxford. She has held fellowships at the Jamestown archaeological site and the Royal Anthropological Institute, where she continues to develop methodologies and projects that explore indigeneity, colonial legacies, and heritage in English museums.