Aggressive policy, enthusiastic news coverage and sensational novelistic style combined to create a distinctive image of Britain's empire in late-Victorian print media. This book traces this phenomenon through the work of editors, special correspondents and authors including W.T. Stead, H. Rider Haggard, H.M. Stanley, Joseph Conrad and Winston Churchill. The argument traces the rise and fall of a romantic imperial discourse from the emergence of celebrity special correspondents like Archibald Forbes in the 1870s, via the death of General Gordon amidst a media storm in 1885, to the thoroughly unromantic industrial killing reported by Churchill at Omdurman in 1898. Connections between key individuals, events and texts are identified and explo...
While many historians of the British Empire have dismissed the presence of imperial motifs and theme...
Through an examination of fiction by H.G. Wells, Joseph Conrad, and John Buchan, this dissertation e...
The British-Indian army fighting in Burma during 1942 is sometimes misleadingly referred to as a ‘Fo...
Winston Churchill’s Morning Post correspondence from Kitchener’s 1898 Sudan expedition documents a s...
This book explores the creation of imperial identities in Britain and several of its colonies--South...
Study of Britain's periodical press from 1351 to 1914- reveals a widespread and continuous interest ...
This study deals with works of imperialist, decadent and futuristic fiction written roughly between ...
Over the course of the nineteenth century, writers showed an increased interest in the representatio...
The 14 broad-ranging and innovative essays in this collection examine the role of media and communic...
Britain in the 18th century was more deeply involved with the world beyond its shores than ever befo...
In this thesis, I argue that authors of the modern romance in late Victorian Britain used imperialis...
To what extent did the British empire resonate meaningfully in British culture and society? Did it m...
This essay examines the representation of the ANZACs within reporting of the controversial Gallipoli...
It has been suggested that “for a few years at the end of the nineteenth century” Daily Mail corresp...
This book shows that novelists often responded to newspapers by reworking well-known events covered ...
While many historians of the British Empire have dismissed the presence of imperial motifs and theme...
Through an examination of fiction by H.G. Wells, Joseph Conrad, and John Buchan, this dissertation e...
The British-Indian army fighting in Burma during 1942 is sometimes misleadingly referred to as a ‘Fo...
Winston Churchill’s Morning Post correspondence from Kitchener’s 1898 Sudan expedition documents a s...
This book explores the creation of imperial identities in Britain and several of its colonies--South...
Study of Britain's periodical press from 1351 to 1914- reveals a widespread and continuous interest ...
This study deals with works of imperialist, decadent and futuristic fiction written roughly between ...
Over the course of the nineteenth century, writers showed an increased interest in the representatio...
The 14 broad-ranging and innovative essays in this collection examine the role of media and communic...
Britain in the 18th century was more deeply involved with the world beyond its shores than ever befo...
In this thesis, I argue that authors of the modern romance in late Victorian Britain used imperialis...
To what extent did the British empire resonate meaningfully in British culture and society? Did it m...
This essay examines the representation of the ANZACs within reporting of the controversial Gallipoli...
It has been suggested that “for a few years at the end of the nineteenth century” Daily Mail corresp...
This book shows that novelists often responded to newspapers by reworking well-known events covered ...
While many historians of the British Empire have dismissed the presence of imperial motifs and theme...
Through an examination of fiction by H.G. Wells, Joseph Conrad, and John Buchan, this dissertation e...
The British-Indian army fighting in Burma during 1942 is sometimes misleadingly referred to as a ‘Fo...