Ohio State University Press
Imperial Media: Colonial Networks and Information Technologies in the British Literary Imagination, 1857-1918
Imperial Media: Colonial Networks and Information Technologies in the British Literary Imagination, 1857-1918
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Ranging in space from the telegraph offices of Rudyard Kipling's India to the wireless transmitter on H. G. Wells's Africanized moon, and in time from the Sepoy Rebellion to the Great War, Imperial Media reveals the extent to which British conceptions of imperial power were inflected by the new media of the nineteenth century: the telegraph, telephone, phonograph, radio, and cinema.
While focusing on the fiction of Kipling, Wells, Marie Corelli, H. Rider Haggard, and John Buchan ("the last Victorian," in Gertrude Himmelfarb's phrase), Aaron Worth also argues that the "imperial media" of the Victorians retain much of their imaginative life and power today, informing such popular entertainments of the twenty-first century as Bollywood cinema and the BBC's science-fiction franchise Torchwood. This is a vital, engaging study that will shape future discussions of both colonial and information systems, as well as the relationship between the two, in Victorian studies and elsewhere.
Aaron Worth is assistant professor of rhetoric at Boston University.
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