Over the long eighteenth century, Britain developed into the foremost naval power in world; with a fleet that could match the combined might of the next two largest European powers – as demonstrated in the Napoleonic Wars – Britain was understood, and understood itself, through the lens of maritime mastery. At the centre of this enduring framework was a potent symbol of Britain in the fused image of the sailor and the ship, as James Thomson’s ‘Rule, Britannia!’ and David Garrick’s ‘Heart of Oak’ fastened together the nation, the sailor, and the ship in a narrative of divinely ordained power and freedom, at once a justification of the empire and its mythology. This dissertation examines the ways that authors navigated these prevailing currents of naval exaltation, focusing closely on how those patriotic constructions were coopted to question the imperial cause. Indeed, I argue that, far from being a stable patriotic icon, the metaphorical unit of the sailor-ship was hotly contested in the eighteenth century. This study contributes to the growing scholarship of the ‘oceanic turn’, decolonizing the imperial assumptions of maritime discourse of and about this period. The challenges to the national narrative confronted the metaphor with its lived realities, a methodology that works both in stories of triumph and scenes of catastrophe, repudiating its assertions of mastery and liberty. This project reveals the decidedly ambivalent portrayal of British naval culture in works by well-known authors like Daniel Defoe, Tobias Smollett, William Cowper, and Olaudah Equiano in addition to engaging with some lesser-known labouring poets like Henry Needler and William Falconer. / Dissertation / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / At the height of the British Empire, it spanned across the globe, held together by the mightiest navy the world had ever seen. The empire justified its existence, to both its own citizens as well as foreigners, as the natural result of a history of skilled sailors and strong ships. However, in the century leading up to the dominance of the British Empire, both the navy and literature about the navy were much less confident about the success of the national project. In fact, a large number of texts – both poems and novels – used the very same sailors and ships to expose the weaknesses of British ambitions. This dissertation examines how these anti-imperial texts functioned and why they were so successful. For a nation that relied on these watery symbols, what did it mean for those elements to be proven false?
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/29261 |
Date | January 2023 |
Creators | Hou, Yue Chen |
Contributors | Walmsley, Peter, English and Cultural Studies |
Source Sets | McMaster University |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
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