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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: D. A. B. RonaldPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.426kg ISBN: 9781350002012ISBN 10: 1350002011 Pages: 304 Publication Date: 25 August 2016 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsThe Naval Chronicle is the literary centerpiece here; Ronald takes us through its advertisements, its news columns, its biographies, its nautical verse, its accounts of “Heroic Atchievements,” and its appeals to humanity for the “destitute midshipman” and the “unfortunate youth.” Fascinating material. * SEL: Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 * Youth, Heroism and Naval Propaganda is a highly original work which makes a significant contribution. Occupying a nexus between naval history, maritime history, cultural, and literary studies, it deserves to be read by scholars in all those fields. At the heart of Ronald’s study is an understanding of the previously undisclosed history of the Naval Chronicle (1799-1818). Although this periodical has long been a central primary source in naval and maritime history, Ronald reveals here, for the first time, its full literary history and ideological significance. * Timothy Jenks, Associate Professor of History, East Carolina University, USA * D.A.B. Ronald's study of British propaganda between the 1745 Rebellion and the Napoleonic Wars hinges on a crisis during the late 1790s. With a war going badly, anti-war sentiment at home, and naval mutinies, an inspirational new ideology was needed, and 'modern patriotism' finally emerged, buttressed by the powerful symbolic figure of the 'young hero'. The study shows how in various literary genres this figure slowly crystallized during the second half of the eighteenth century, pitching merit against established interests, and flourished around the time of the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805. Ronald has unearthed a mass of material from the press, and particularly from the Naval Chronicle (1799-1818). He provides a fascinating example of a propaganda campaign harnessing the energy and enthusiasm of youth, and insights into the formation of a British political identity during this period. * Colin Heywood, Emeritus Professor of Modern French History, University of Nottingham, UK * D.A.B Ronald’s admirable book reaches across a range of disciplines as it traces the emergence of the young maritime hero as a locus of sentimentalised national heroism in a time of war. Literary scholars as well as historians of all stripes will find plenty of interest within its pages. Ronald skilfully shapes a wealth of archival material into a compelling account which encompasses ideas of youthfulness, masculinity, sensibility and the family as well as warfare, propaganda, charity and politics. It proves beyond doubt the centrality of naval warfare to British culture during this vital period and I highly recommend it. * Andrew Rudd, Lecturer in English, University of Exeter, UK and author of Sympathy and India in British Literature, 1770-1830 * Youth, Heroism and Naval Propaganda is a highly original work which makes a significant contribution. Occupying a nexus between naval history, maritime history, cultural, and literary studies, it deserves to be read by scholars in all those fields. At the heart of Ronald's study is an understanding of the previously undisclosed history of the Naval Chronicle (1799-1818). Although this periodical has long been a central primary source in naval and maritime history, Ronald reveals here, for the first time, its full literary history and ideological significance. Timothy Jenks, Associate Professor of History, East Carolina University, USA D.A.B. Ronald's study of British propaganda between the 1745 Rebellion and the Napoleonic Wars hinges on a crisis during the late 1790s. With a war going badly, anti-war sentiment at home, and naval mutinies, an inspirational new ideology was needed, and 'modern patriotism' finally emerged, buttressed by the powerful symbolic figure of the 'young hero'. The study shows how in various literary genres this figure slowly crystallized during the second half of the eighteenth century, pitching merit against established interests, and flourished around the time of the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805. Ronald has unearthed a mass of material from the press, and particularly from the Naval Chronicle (1799-1818). He provides a fascinating example of a propaganda campaign harnessing the energy and enthusiasm of youth, and insights into the formation of a British political identity during this period. Colin Heywood, Emeritus Professor of Modern French History, University of Nottingham, UK D.A.B Ronald's admirable book reaches across a range of disciplines as it traces the emergence of the young maritime hero as a locus of sentimentalised national heroism in a time of war. Literary scholars as well as historians of all stripes will find plenty of interest within its pages. Ronald skilfully shapes a wealth of archival material into a compelling account which encompasses ideas of youthfulness, masculinity, sensibility and the family as well as warfare, propaganda, charity and politics. It proves beyond doubt the centrality of naval warfare to British culture during this vital period and I highly recommend it. Andrew Rudd, Lecturer in English, University of Exeter, UK and author of Sympathy and India in British Literature, 1770-1830 Author InformationD. A. B. Ronald is an independent scholar and has a PhD from the University of Exeter, UK. 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