The White Man's Burdens: An Anthology of British Poetry of the EmpireChris Brooks, Peter Faulkner University of Exeter Press, 1996 - 387 Seiten In 1898, notoriously, Kipling urged the imperialist nations to 'Take up the White Man's Burden' the following year, in Satan Absolved, Wilfrid Scawen Blunt angrily replied, 'The White Man's Burden, Lord, is the burden of his cash'. Such ideological conflicts - and a whole range of intermediate positions - feature in much of the poetry British writers produced about the British Empire over the four centuries of its rise and fall. The discourses of postcolonialism have drawn attention to the major and continuing significance of the cultural products of the period of Western imperialism. But, so far, they have concentrated largely upon fiction and upon the writings and experiences of those parts of the world that were subject to colonialism and imperialist oppression. For the first time, The White Man's Burdens offers a cross-section of British poetry in which the Empire was the burden of the song. The material, much of it previously uncollected, is drawn from a broad cultural spectrum that includes narrative poetry, heroic verse, patriotic ballads, music hall monologues, and poems from Punch. A substantial Introduction sets the poems in the context of the economic, political, and ideological development of British imperial rule, and headnotes historicize the poems themselves, which are presented chronologically - from George Chapman's 'De Guiana: Carmen Epicum' of 1596 to Fred D'Aguiar's 'At the Grave of the Unknown African' of 1993. The result is a poetic summary of the changing attitudes of an imperialist nation to its own imperialism, attitudes which range from jingoism and racism, through religious idealism and liberal anxiety, to outright disgust at the whole enterprise. |
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Seite 53
... gold , You will loose golde , for which you loose your soules ; You that choose nought for right , but certaintie , And feare that value will get onlie blowes , Placing your faith in Incredulitie ; Sit till you see a woonder , Vertue ...
... gold , You will loose golde , for which you loose your soules ; You that choose nought for right , but certaintie , And feare that value will get onlie blowes , Placing your faith in Incredulitie ; Sit till you see a woonder , Vertue ...
Seite 119
... gold their fate controls , The basest appetite of basest souls ; Gold , better gained by what their ripening sky , Their fertile fields , their arts , and mines supply . What wrongs , what injuries does Oppression plead To smooth the ...
... gold their fate controls , The basest appetite of basest souls ; Gold , better gained by what their ripening sky , Their fertile fields , their arts , and mines supply . What wrongs , what injuries does Oppression plead To smooth the ...
Seite 303
... gold By lordly Solomon of old , Who sailing northward to Perim Took all the gold away with him , And left a lot of holes ; Vacuities that bring despair To those confiding souls Who find that they have bought a share In marvellous ...
... gold By lordly Solomon of old , Who sailing northward to Perim Took all the gold away with him , And left a lot of holes ; Vacuities that bring despair To those confiding souls Who find that they have bought a share In marvellous ...
Inhalt
Campbell Thomas Ye Mariners of England A Naval | 15 |
Hayes John Milton The Green Eye of the Yellow | 46 |
Chapman George De Guiana Carmen Epicum 1596 | 47 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Africa ALFRED ALFRED TENNYSON Ballads battle beneath blood blow Boer Botany Bay boys brave breath Britain British Britons bugles campaign century cheer Christian colonial crown dark dead death deep dream earth East England English eyes fair fight flag Flag of England fought glory gold hand heart heaven honour imperial imperialist India isle Jack Barrett jingoism Jubilee King Kipling lads land lives London Lord Mandalay missionary Mother Mutiny mythology of empire nations native never night o'er Pagoda Tree patriotic peace plain poem poet poetry poor Punch Queen race road to Mandalay round RUDYARD KIPLING sail savage ship shore slave trade slavery smile soldiers song sonnet sons soul sword Tennyson thee There's thine toil verse Victorian voice waves West White Man's burden Widow at Windsor wild WILFRED SCAWEN BLUNT WILLIAM COWPER wind written