Arms and the Imagination

Essays on War, Politics, and Anglophone Culture

By (author) Robert C. Gordon

Paperback - £62.00

Publication date:

04 August 2009

Length of book:

390 pages

Publisher

Hamilton Books

Dimensions:

232x155mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9780761838371

From the time of John Milton to that of William Blake, the literature of Britain absorbed the impact of two major military developments. In the early modern era, the military revolution strove to establish permanent armies under state discipline and, in England, the resistance to this development exhibited in the controversy over standing armies. In this penetrating and highly original study, Gordon demonstrates that military debate, encouraged by Britain's semi-secure insular situation, had a remarkable impact on the British imagination and its narratives. Affected were structure and closure; character evaluation; heroic and mock-heroic styles; attitudes toward love and marriage; and the roles of locality and environment in the shaping of the national and personal character. More remarkable still, these effects signaled the emergence of a civilian consciousness that still influences our literary preference and expectations.