'A strange, though native coast': imperial and mercantile reactions to coastal arrival in early modern literature

<p>This thesis explores imperial and mercantile reactions to moments of coastal arrival in early modern English literature. It demonstrates the various ways in which authors presented arrival on shorelines in order to consider political, ethical, and literary issues. Coastal arrival is shown t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Humphries, W
Other Authors: van Es, B
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
_version_ 1797103460943921152
author Humphries, W
author2 van Es, B
author_facet van Es, B
Humphries, W
author_sort Humphries, W
collection OXFORD
description <p>This thesis explores imperial and mercantile reactions to moments of coastal arrival in early modern English literature. It demonstrates the various ways in which authors presented arrival on shorelines in order to consider political, ethical, and literary issues. Coastal arrival is shown to have become particularly significant during the period, owing to England’s complicated sense of itself as an island nation with uncertain colonial aspirations. However, the thesis also reveals the connectedness between such novel representations of arrival shores and earlier classical models of literary coastal arrival. Chapter One examines competing visions of New World colonialism in the writings of Richard Hakluyt. Chapter Two traces the evolving political and ethical treatment of the shoreline in Edmund Spenser’s <em>The Faerie Queene</em>. Chapter Three considers allusion to and adaptation of the classical story of Aeneas’ arrival on the shores of Carthage in early modern drama. Finally, Chapter Four charts the ways in which the aspirations of seventeenth-century merchant-adventurers arriving on the shores of America were satirised on London’s stage and page. Much as the shoreline is a liminal meeting point between land and sea, so too the literature of the period explores the complex blurring of binaries that takes place at moments of coastal arrival.</p>
first_indexed 2024-03-07T06:20:26Z
format Thesis
id oxford-uuid:f289b4bc-c02c-4f2b-86b3-d217f307eaf9
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T06:20:26Z
publishDate 2019
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:f289b4bc-c02c-4f2b-86b3-d217f307eaf92022-03-27T12:04:43Z'A strange, though native coast': imperial and mercantile reactions to coastal arrival in early modern literatureThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:f289b4bc-c02c-4f2b-86b3-d217f307eaf9EnglishORA Deposit2019Humphries, Wvan Es, BMaguire, LAndrew<p>This thesis explores imperial and mercantile reactions to moments of coastal arrival in early modern English literature. It demonstrates the various ways in which authors presented arrival on shorelines in order to consider political, ethical, and literary issues. Coastal arrival is shown to have become particularly significant during the period, owing to England’s complicated sense of itself as an island nation with uncertain colonial aspirations. However, the thesis also reveals the connectedness between such novel representations of arrival shores and earlier classical models of literary coastal arrival. Chapter One examines competing visions of New World colonialism in the writings of Richard Hakluyt. Chapter Two traces the evolving political and ethical treatment of the shoreline in Edmund Spenser’s <em>The Faerie Queene</em>. Chapter Three considers allusion to and adaptation of the classical story of Aeneas’ arrival on the shores of Carthage in early modern drama. Finally, Chapter Four charts the ways in which the aspirations of seventeenth-century merchant-adventurers arriving on the shores of America were satirised on London’s stage and page. Much as the shoreline is a liminal meeting point between land and sea, so too the literature of the period explores the complex blurring of binaries that takes place at moments of coastal arrival.</p>
spellingShingle Humphries, W
'A strange, though native coast': imperial and mercantile reactions to coastal arrival in early modern literature
title 'A strange, though native coast': imperial and mercantile reactions to coastal arrival in early modern literature
title_full 'A strange, though native coast': imperial and mercantile reactions to coastal arrival in early modern literature
title_fullStr 'A strange, though native coast': imperial and mercantile reactions to coastal arrival in early modern literature
title_full_unstemmed 'A strange, though native coast': imperial and mercantile reactions to coastal arrival in early modern literature
title_short 'A strange, though native coast': imperial and mercantile reactions to coastal arrival in early modern literature
title_sort a strange though native coast imperial and mercantile reactions to coastal arrival in early modern literature
work_keys_str_mv AT humphriesw astrangethoughnativecoastimperialandmercantilereactionstocoastalarrivalinearlymodernliterature