"This is a superb book—beautifully crafted,
elegantly written, theoretically informed, and immensely learned. Hodgkins has produced an admirably well-balanced, temperate, and
persuasive reinterpretation of English colonial literature, which
will have a lasting impact on postcolonial critical studies."—J.
Martin Evans
"The strength of Empire," wrote Ben Jonson, "is in religion." In
Reforming Empire, Christopher Hodgkins takes Jonson's
dictum as his point of departure, showing how for more than four
centuries the Protestant imagination gave the British Empire its
main paradigms for dominion and also, ironically, its chief
languages of anti-imperial dissent. From Edmund Spenser's
Faerie Queene to Rudyard Kipling's "The Man Who Would Be
King," English literature about empire has turned with strange
constancy to themes of worship and idolatry, atrocity and
deliverance, slavery and service, conversion, prophecy, apostasy,
and doom.
Focusing on the work of the Protestant imagination from the
Renaissance origins of English overseas colonization through the
modern end of England's colonial enterprise, Hodgkins organizes
his study around three kinds of religious binding—unification,
subjugation, and self-restraint. He shows how early modern
Protestants like Hakluyt and Spenser reformed the Arthurian
chronicles and claimed to inherit Rome's empire from the Caesars:
how Ralegh and later Cromwell imagined a counterconquest of
Spanish America, and how Milton's Satan came to resemble Corts;
how Drake and the fictional Crusoe established their status as
worthy colonial masters by refusing to be worshiped as gods; and
how seventeenth-century preachers, poets, and colonists moved
haltingly toward a racist metaphysics--as Virginia began by
celebrating the mixed marriage of Pocahontas but soon imposed the
draconian separation of the Color Line.
Yet Hodgkins reveals that Tudor-Stuart times also saw the revival
of Augustinian anti-expansionism and the genesis of Protestant
imperial guilt. From the start, British Protestant colonialism
contained its own opposite: a religion of self-restraint. Though
this conscience often was co-opted or conscripted to legitimize
conquests and pacify the conquered, it frequently found memorable
and even fierce literary expression in writers such as
Shakespeare, Daniel, Herbert, Swift, Johnson, Burke, Blake,
Austen, Browning, Tennyson, Conrad, Forster, and finally the
anti-Protestant Waugh. Written in a lively and accessible style,
Reforming Empire will be of interest to all scholars and
students of English literature.
About the Author
Christopher Hodgkins is Associate Professor of English at the
University of North Carolina at Greensboro. He is the author of
Authority, Church, and Society in George Herbert: Return to the
Middle Way.