This article focuses on the relationship between China and Ireland in Sydney Owenson’s Florence Macarthy (1818). It takes as its starting point Peter Kitson’s formulation of an emergent “Romantic Sinology,” which finds its basis in the processes of intercultural transmission that took place between Georgian Britain and Qing China in the Romantic period. The article focuses on the interaction between China and Ireland within the wider context of Enlightenment formations of sympathy, suggesting that Owenson’s depiction of China is closely linked to the aesthetic of sensibility and its implied model of an emergent cosmopolitanism based on cross-cultural sympathetic identification. In doing so, it positions the novel within a body of writing ab...
Western imperial interests in China between the mid-19th and early-20th centuries created a particul...
In the eighteenth century, both the British and Chinese Empires boasted imperial might through the p...
Founded in 1793, Newcastle’s Literary & Philosophical Society is the largest independent library out...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
This thesis examines the idea of China in British literature during a clearly defined period. Betwe...
This article investigates the conflicted cultural identity of those Irish-speaking antiquarians work...
"The Romantic Reinvention of Imperial China" argues that Romantic literature shaped nineteenth-centu...
International audienceIreland was a central interest of intellectuals of the late nineteenth and of ...
One could argue that the Victorian relations with China began, avant la lettre, in 1793, with Lord M...
The volume highlights Ireland's cultural and linguistic influence in the world. It springs from rese...
At the furthest reach from Ireland – whether in terms of size or geography or culture – China seems ...
This study has two purposes: first, by collecting and examining a body of China-related periodical w...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...
The first major cultural study to focus exclusively on this decisive period in modern British-Chines...
On 27 November 1934, ‘a traditional Chinese play’, Lady Precious Stream premiered at the Little Thea...
Western imperial interests in China between the mid-19th and early-20th centuries created a particul...
In the eighteenth century, both the British and Chinese Empires boasted imperial might through the p...
Founded in 1793, Newcastle’s Literary & Philosophical Society is the largest independent library out...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
This thesis examines the idea of China in British literature during a clearly defined period. Betwe...
This article investigates the conflicted cultural identity of those Irish-speaking antiquarians work...
"The Romantic Reinvention of Imperial China" argues that Romantic literature shaped nineteenth-centu...
International audienceIreland was a central interest of intellectuals of the late nineteenth and of ...
One could argue that the Victorian relations with China began, avant la lettre, in 1793, with Lord M...
The volume highlights Ireland's cultural and linguistic influence in the world. It springs from rese...
At the furthest reach from Ireland – whether in terms of size or geography or culture – China seems ...
This study has two purposes: first, by collecting and examining a body of China-related periodical w...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...
The first major cultural study to focus exclusively on this decisive period in modern British-Chines...
On 27 November 1934, ‘a traditional Chinese play’, Lady Precious Stream premiered at the Little Thea...
Western imperial interests in China between the mid-19th and early-20th centuries created a particul...
In the eighteenth century, both the British and Chinese Empires boasted imperial might through the p...
Founded in 1793, Newcastle’s Literary & Philosophical Society is the largest independent library out...