Viewing Brexit as part of a longer history of Anglo-Saxon racial and cultural ex-ceptionalism, this article reflects on what Samuel Butler’s satirical novel Erewhon, or Over the Range (1872) can tell us about the utopian impulses informing Brexit’s neoimperialist ideology and hence about British identity politics today. Set in an inward-looking, socially homogeneous, and postindustrial society somewhere in the colonial southern hemisphere, Erewhon provides an anachronistic simulacrum of both an isolationist “Little England” and an imperial “Global Britain,” critiquing the idea of the self-sufficient, ethnonationalist “island nation” by demonstrating the extent to which it relies on the racial logic of White utopia-nism, as well as on a disa...
In the years leading up the EU referendum, British society witnessed a sudden and violent shift towa...
The referendum question does not offer a clear choice despite the two seemingly simple alternatives....
In Middle England (2018), novelist Jonathan Coe revisits some events of Britain’s recent past in ord...
The word "utopia" was first used by Sir Thomas More in 1516 as the title for a book in which he desc...
This article considers how postcolonial fiction anticipated, apprehended, and critically explored th...
The search for clues of the writer’s national identity in the construction of a utopian/dystopian pl...
This article argues that there are important connections between what is happening in Brexit and mat...
How likely are utopian futures of the kind that Jeremy Corbyn has recently envisioned for the future...
This thesis comprises a scholarly edition of Samuel Butler’s satirical novel 'Erewhon; or, Over the ...
The post-war years were a period of introspection for British society as the nation endeavoured to ...
In the lead-up to the Brexit referendum politicians and journalists invoked the concept of utopia to...
In the lead-up to the Brexit referendum politicians and journalists invoked the concept of utopia to...
This paper takes Anthony Cartwright’s The Cut (2017) as its central focus, a novel commissioned by E...
Viewing capitalism as emerging primarily from within the framework of empire rather than the nation ...
This Currents section provides accounts of Britain’s exit (Brexit) or departure from the European Un...
In the years leading up the EU referendum, British society witnessed a sudden and violent shift towa...
The referendum question does not offer a clear choice despite the two seemingly simple alternatives....
In Middle England (2018), novelist Jonathan Coe revisits some events of Britain’s recent past in ord...
The word "utopia" was first used by Sir Thomas More in 1516 as the title for a book in which he desc...
This article considers how postcolonial fiction anticipated, apprehended, and critically explored th...
The search for clues of the writer’s national identity in the construction of a utopian/dystopian pl...
This article argues that there are important connections between what is happening in Brexit and mat...
How likely are utopian futures of the kind that Jeremy Corbyn has recently envisioned for the future...
This thesis comprises a scholarly edition of Samuel Butler’s satirical novel 'Erewhon; or, Over the ...
The post-war years were a period of introspection for British society as the nation endeavoured to ...
In the lead-up to the Brexit referendum politicians and journalists invoked the concept of utopia to...
In the lead-up to the Brexit referendum politicians and journalists invoked the concept of utopia to...
This paper takes Anthony Cartwright’s The Cut (2017) as its central focus, a novel commissioned by E...
Viewing capitalism as emerging primarily from within the framework of empire rather than the nation ...
This Currents section provides accounts of Britain’s exit (Brexit) or departure from the European Un...
In the years leading up the EU referendum, British society witnessed a sudden and violent shift towa...
The referendum question does not offer a clear choice despite the two seemingly simple alternatives....
In Middle England (2018), novelist Jonathan Coe revisits some events of Britain’s recent past in ord...