Tea, Fiction, and the Imperial Sensorium

IF 0.1 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Victoriographies-A Journal of Nineteenth-Century Writing 1790-1914 Pub Date : 2022-07-01 DOI:10.3366/vic.2022.0456
Kate Thomas
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Abstract

This article explores a cultural paradox in nineteenth-century England: that tea, a colonially sourced comestible, was figured as a curative for the exhaustions incurred by building and administering an empire. Pursuing the idea that colonialism reconfigured the sensorium of both colonised and coloniser, I trace how tea – as a stimulant and a palliative – was an agent in mediating the highs and lows of imperial feeling. I correlate sitting down and tea-drinking with the settlings of colonial annexation and with the consumption and production of fiction, specifically the genres of fantasy and sensation fiction. Writers engaged include Wilkie Collins, Thomas de Quincey, J. M. Barrie, and Thomas Macaulay.
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茶、小说与帝国感官
这篇文章探讨了19世纪英国的一个文化悖论:茶,一种殖民地来源的食物,被认为是治疗建立和管理帝国所产生的疲惫的药物。追求殖民主义重新配置了被殖民者和殖民者的感官的想法,我追溯了茶是如何 – 作为兴奋剂和缓和剂 – 是调解帝国情感高潮和低谷的代理人。我把坐下来喝茶与殖民地吞并的解决以及小说的消费和生产联系起来,特别是幻想和感觉小说的类型。参与的作家包括威尔基·柯林斯、托马斯·德·昆西、J·M·巴里和托马斯·麦考利。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
32
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