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Challenging existing narratives of the relationship between China and Europe, this study establishes how modern English identity evolved through strategies of identifying with rather than against China. Through an examination of England's obsession with Chinese objects throughout the long eighteenth century, A Taste for China argues that chinoiserie in literature and material culture played a central role in shaping emergent conceptions of taste and subjectivity. Informed by sources as diverse as the writings of John Locke, Alexander Pope, and Mary Wortley Montagu, Zuroski begins with a consideration of how literature transported cosmopolitan commercial practices into a model of individual and collective identity. She then extends her argument to the vibrant world of Restoration comedy-most notably the controversial The Country Wife by William Wycherley-where Chinese objects are systematically associated with questionable tastes and behaviors. Subsequent chapters draw on Defoe, Pope, and Swift to explore how adventure fiction and satirical poetry use chinoiserie to construct, question, and reimagine the dynamic relationship between people and things. The second half of the eighteenth century sees a marked shift as English subjects anxiously seek to separate themselves from Chinese objects. A reading of texts including Aphra Behn's Oroonoko and Jonas Hanway's Essay on Tea shows that the enthrallment with chinoiserie does not disappear, but is rewritten as an aristocratic perversion in midcentury literature that prefigures modern sexuality. Ultimately, at the century's end, it is nearly disavowed altogether, which is evinced in works like Charlotte Lennox's The Female Quixote and Jane Austen's Northanger Abbey.A persuasively argued and richly textured monograph on eighteenth-century English culture, A Taste for China will interest scholars of cultural history, thing theory, and East-West relations.
Eugenia Zuroski is Assistant Professor of English and Cultural Studies at McMaster University.
List of FiguresAcknowledgementsIntroduction: "China" and The Prehistory of Orientalism Chapter 1: The Cosmopolitan Nation, "Where Order in Variety We See" Chapter 2: The Chinese Touchstone of the Tasteful Imagination Chapter 3: Defoe's Trinkets: Fiction's Spectral Traffic Chapter 4: "Nature to Advantage Drest": The Poetry of Subjectivity Chapter 5: How Chinese Things Became Oriental Chapter 6: Disenchanting China: Orientalism and the English Novel Afterword: Rethinking Modern Taste
A Taste for China insists that we continue to query the parameters of eighteenth-century Britishness, and in its impressive range of readings, succeeds in making China a pedagogical imperative for the teaching of eighteenthcentury fiction."
Michael Gibbs Hill, University of South Carolina) Hill, Michael Gibbs (Associate Professor of Chinese and Comparative Literature, Associate Professor of Chinese and Comparative Literature
Kojin Karatani, Osaka) Karatani, Kojin (Japanese Philosopher and Literary Theorist, Japanese Philosopher and Literary Theorist, formerly Kinki University
Carla Nappi, Mellon Professor of History and Co-Director of the Humanities Center) Nappi, Prof Carla (University of Pittsburgh, University of Pittsburgh, Nappi, NAPPI
Timothy Yu, University of Wisconsin-Madison) Yu, Timothy (Martha Meier Renk-Bascom Professor of Poetry and Professor of English and Asian American Studies
Carla Nappi, Mellon Professor of History and Co-Director of the Humanities Center) Nappi, Prof Carla (University of Pittsburgh, University of Pittsburgh
Jinyi Chu, Yale University) Chu, Jinyi (Assistant Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures, Assistant Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures
Jinyi Chu, Yale University) Chu, Jinyi (Assistant Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures, Assistant Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures
Timothy Yu, University of Wisconsin-Madison) Yu, Timothy (Martha Meier Renk-Bascom Professor of Poetry and Professor of English and Asian American Studies
Carla Nappi, Mellon Professor of History and Co-Director of the Humanities Center) Nappi, Prof Carla (University of Pittsburgh, University of Pittsburgh