Beautifully crafted and a pleasure to read, Walter Scott on Monarchy effects a substantial reorientation of Scott’s ground-breaking Waverley Novels. Rereading the series as a sustained reflection on sovereignty and governmentality, it offers fresh insights and constitutes a significant intervention in the current reconsideration of Romantic-era genres and historical thought.

- Ina Ferris, University of Ottawa,

This book situates Walter Scott's novels on monarchy within both their historical contexts and biopolitical theory, particularly regarding the King's Two Bodies, a notion that, according to Ernst H. Kantorowicz, raises 'the spectre of an absolutism. . .in an abstract physiological fiction.' It attends to Scott's careful calibration of the historical record behind each novel while noting that his reflections on the seismic shifts caused by the French Revolution and the Napoleonic era culminating in The Life of Napoleon Buonaparte (1827) informs his representations of monarchy in the novels. While each novel's consideration of the rights and limitations of royal prerogatives is deeply grounded in its own historical context, Scott's fiction and the Life demonstrate keen awareness of the nineteenth-century shift to what Michel Foucault calls 'governmentality' that is, the sovereign power's project to control and protect subjects, often through surveillance, policing, and the strategic exercise of mercy.
Les mer
The first focused treatment of Scott’s monarchs in historical context and biopolitical theory.
Acknowledgements Introduction: The Life of Napoleon Buonaparte: Commencing History Part I. Crusading Kings 1. Ivanhoe: Constructing a National Myth 2. The Talisman: The King’s Two Bodies under Stress 3. The Betrothed: Sovereign Power and the Clash of Cultures Part II. Rival Queens 4. The Abbot: Romancing the Sovereign Body 5. Kenilworth: Performance and Power in Elizabeth’s England Part III. Stuart Ways of Ruling 6. The Fortunes of Nigel: Ungainly Sovereignty as Saving Grace 7. Peveril of the Peak: Plotting the King’s Two Bodies 8. Woodstock: The Once and Future King Part IV. Hanoverian Mercy 9. Waverley: Dynastic Exigencies and Filial Service 10. Redgauntlet: Jacobite Delusions and Hanoverian Hopes 11. The Heart of Midlothian: Contesting the Royal Right of Mercy Conclusion: Anne of Geierstein and the Failure of Royal Ambition Works Cited Index
Les mer
Offers new and comprehensive reading Scott’s representation of monarchs in medieval, early modern, and eighteenth-century contexts

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781399535816
Publisert
2025-03-31
Utgiver
Edinburgh University Press
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet

Biografisk notat

Tara Ghoshal Wallace is Professor Emerita of English at the George Washington University. Her books include Imperial Characters: Home and Periphery in Eighteenth-Century Literature (2010), Jane Austen and Narrative Authority (1995) and she is the editor of Fanny Burney, A Busy Day (1984) and co-editor of Women Critics 1660–1820 (1995).