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BEYOND THE NATION: PENNY FICTION, THE CRIMEAN WAR, AND POLITICAL BELONGING

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 March 2018

Ellen Rosenman*
Affiliation:
University of Kentucky
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Extract

“The nation state . . . found the novel. And vice versa: the novel found the nation-state” (Moretti 17). Franco Moretti's famous formulation has proved as partial as it is influential, challenged by a growing body of transnational scholarship. It is challenged as well by a different set of novels from the canonical ones Moretti has in mind: working-class penny fiction. Given the inequities of society, it is not surprising that this literature expresses a more complicated relationship to England. The working classes laid claim to England itself, insisting that their autochthonic status made them its true sons but that within the nation-state they were subjects, not citizens. The gap between this deep sense of belonging and formal political exclusion structures hundreds of penny novels produced in the mid-nineteenth century.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2018 
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Figure 16. Reynolds's Miscellany covered the Crimean War as it unfolded during the publication of Omar (“Camp Scene in the Crimea,” Reynolds's Miscellany, 3 Mar. 1855, 80).

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Figure 17. Omar opens with an illustration much like those used in news coverage of the war (Reynolds's Miscellany, 6 Jan. 1855, 369).

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Figure 18. Before the publication of the novel, the real Omar was presented as a military hero (“Omar Pasha: A Personal Sketch,” Reynolds's Miscellany, 11 Mar. 1854, 97).

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Figure 19. Omar on the first page of an issue of Reynolds's Miscellany during the novel's publication (Reynolds's Miscellany, 4 Aug. 1855, 17).

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Figure 20. Mazzini takes over (“Joseph Mazzini,” Reynolds's Miscellany, 24 Nov. 1855, 273).

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Figure 21. Kossuth takes over the first page of Reynolds's Miscellany during the novel's publication (“Louis Kossuth,” Reynolds's Miscellany, 1 Dec. 1855, 189).

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Figure 22. The ghost of 1848 reappears in 1855 (Reynolds, Omar 289).

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Figure 23. The Turkish sultan selects Omar to command his forces (Reynolds, Omar 41).

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Figure 24. Disguised as Gustave, a member of the Zoave regiment, Catherine saves Hazlewood's life (Reynolds, Omar 165).

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Figure 25. Hazlewood asks Omar's forgiveness for his transgressions (Reynolds, Omar 153).