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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Peter D. Mathews , Donald E. PalumboPublisher: McFarland & Co Inc Imprint: McFarland & Co Inc Weight: 0.251kg ISBN: 9781476686271ISBN 10: 1476686270 Pages: 277 Publication Date: 30 October 2021 Recommended Age: From 18 years Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Preface Prologue: Merlin's Legacy A Mystic Robe of Midnight Blue The Mythological Magician Merlin's Imperial Legacy Chapter 1. The Fantasy of a Return The Modern Fantasy of Return The Englishness of English Magic Magic's Persistence Chapter 2. Writing, Text, Mythology All the Texts of the World The Man Who Was Also a Book Writing History, Writing Fiction Chapter 3. An Artificial Myth Dual Perspectives The English Malady Mythologies and Evasions Chapter 4. Through the Looking-Glass The Paper Mirror The Monarch and the Mirror The Nameless Slave Chapter 5. Imperialism's Magic Helper Anthropology and Unreason The Illusionist's Mission The Magic Helper Chapter 6. The Reason of Unreason Magic and Madness Reason's Double Reason and Unreason Epilogue: New Constellations The Starry Heavens >Endless Night Beyond Disenchantment The Sky Speaks References IndexReviewsIn a dazzling new reading, Peter D. Mathews reveals Susanna Clarke's Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell as exposing myths of British self-satisfaction and enacting a destabilizing, exhilarating 'change in the night sky' of the world we think we know. This is first-rate criticism that opens a wonderful book to its readers as never before. --Nicholas Birns, New York University; With Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell, Susanna Clarke managed to combine the forms of the historical novel and modern fantasy, evoking the realities of Europe in the time of Napoleon and Lord Nelson alongside wizardry and wild romance, and making both come vividly to life. Peter D. Mathews's English Magic and Imperial Madness is a study worthy of this achievement, as it evinces deep literary and philosophical scholarship while artfully connecting an analysis of the powers of fantasy with an anti-colonial politics. Thus, Mathews effectively shows how modern fantasy literature can profoundly affect our understanding of the world and its history. It is a remarkable achievement, and a must-read for scholars of fantasy and of world literature more broadly. --Robert T. Tally Jr., Texas State University; Peter D. Mathews weaves some magic of his own in English Magic and Imperial Madness, his spellbinding analysis of the anti-colonial politics of Susanna Clarke's brilliant Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell. Triangulating sorcery, insanity, and political power, Mathews adeptly situates Clarke's novel within the contexts of English history, literature, and culture, equipping the reader with the background necessary to appreciate Clarke's critique of British imperialism. Mathews' erudite consideration of myth, magic, fantasy, and politics will serve as the indispensable grimoire for those seeking to unravel the mysteries of Clarke's rich fantasy novel. --Jeffrey Andrew Weinstock, professor of English, Central Michigan University. """In a dazzling new reading, Peter D. Mathews reveals Susanna Clarke's Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell as exposing myths of British self-satisfaction and enacting a destabilizing, exhilarating 'change in the night sky' of the world we think we know. This is first-rate criticism that opens a wonderful book to its readers as never before.""--Nicholas Birns, instructor, NYU Center for Applied Liberal Arts ""Peter D. Mathews weaves some magic of his own in English Magic and Imperial Madness, his spellbinding analysis of the ""anti-colonial politics"" of Susanna Clarke's brilliant Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell. Triangulating sorcery, insanity, and political power, Mathews adeptly situates Clarke's novel within the contexts of English history, literature, and culture, equipping the reader with the background necessary to appreciate Clarke's critique of British imperialism. Mathews' erudite consideration of myth, magic, fantasy, and politics will serve as the indispensable grimoire for those seeking to unravel the mysteries of Clarke's rich fantasy novel.""--Jeffrey Andrew Weinstock, professor of English, Central Michigan University. ""With Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell, Susanna Clarke managed to combine the forms of the historical novel and modern fantasy, evoking the realities of Europe in the time of Napoleon and Lord Nelson alongside wizardry and wild romance, and making both come vividly to life. Peter D. Mathews's English Magic and Imperial Madness is a study worthy of this achievement, as it evinces deep literary and philosophical scholarship while artfully connecting an analysis of the powers of fantasy with an anti-colonial politics. Thus, Mathews effectively shows how modern fantasy literature can profoundly affect our understanding of the world and its history. It is a remarkable achievement, and a must-read for scholars of fantasy and of world literature more broadly.""--Robert T. Tally Jr., professor of English, Texas State University" """Peter D. Mathews weaves some magic of his own in English Magic and Imperial Madness, his spellbinding analysis of the ""anti-colonial politics"" of Susanna Clarke's brilliant Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell. Triangulating sorcery, insanity, and political power, Mathews adeptly situates Clarke's novel within the contexts of English history, literature, and culture, equipping the reader with the background necessary to appreciate Clarke's critique of British imperialism. Mathews' erudite consideration of myth, magic, fantasy, and politics will serve as the indispensable grimoire for those seeking to unravel the mysteries of Clarke's rich fantasy novel.""--Jeffrey Andrew Weinstock, professor of English, Central Michigan University." Author InformationPeter D. Mathews is a professor of English literature at Hanyang University in Seoul, South Korea. Donald E. Palumbo is a professor of English at East Carolina University. He lives in Greenville, North Carolina. 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