The “silver net of civilization”: Aesthetic Imperialism in Mary Shelley’s The Last Man
Online Access
http://id.erudit.org/iderudit/015822arAbstract
This essay examines the interrelations of religion, civilization, and imperialism in Shelley’s The Last Man. Though Shelley may envision the negative effects of imperialism in this novel, I argue that she does not critique the discourse of civilization itself, which helped justify imperialist designs. Furthermore, by viewing the aesthetic in Shelley’s novel as enmeshed with the political, I see Shelley’s aesthetic imperialism curiously aligned with the Evangelicals’ version of middle-class religion. Shelley would reject the Evangelicals’ arguments for the moral norms of Christianity as the means of civilization, but her aesthetic imperialism, through its emphasis on the self-regulation and discipline produced by literature and culture, also becomes a means to train the uncivilized in these bourgeois values.Date
2007Type
textIdentifier
oai:erudit.org:015822arhttp://id.erudit.org/iderudit/015822ar
doi:10.7202/015822ar
DOI
10.7202/015822arCopyright/License
Copyright © MichaelEberle-Sinatra 1996-2007 — All rights reservedae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.7202/015822ar