Book contents
- The Nation in British Literature and Culture
- Cambridge Themes in British Literature and Culture
- The Nation in British Literature and Culture
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Part I Origins
- Part II Writing the Nation
- Chapter 6 Cultural Borrowings
- Chapter 7 Tradition and Transformation in Literature
- Chapter 8 Milton and National Exceptionalism
- Part III Revolutions and Empires
- Part IV Making the Modern Nation
- Part V Futures
- Index
Chapter 7 - Tradition and Transformation in Literature
from Part II - Writing the Nation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 July 2023
- The Nation in British Literature and Culture
- Cambridge Themes in British Literature and Culture
- The Nation in British Literature and Culture
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Part I Origins
- Part II Writing the Nation
- Chapter 6 Cultural Borrowings
- Chapter 7 Tradition and Transformation in Literature
- Chapter 8 Milton and National Exceptionalism
- Part III Revolutions and Empires
- Part IV Making the Modern Nation
- Part V Futures
- Index
Summary
England was probably the first country in Europe to construct a sense of itself as a nation state, but even as it did so the boundaries of native tradition remained uncertain. In the sixteenth century two competing narratives of nationhood are visible, one British and the other Anglo-Saxon (Warner, Spenser, Drayton), and it is the second, more specifically English narrative that comes to supersede the British story (Shakespeare’s histories). Those narratives are complemented in the field of verse form by a further competition between art, represented by classical metres, and nature, represented by native English ‘rhyme’, in which the latter asserts its claims to literary status and value, and history and prosody then converge in the idea of the long line. The achievement of a sense of English national identity in literature is finally constructed as a triumph of nature over art (Daniel).
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- The Nation in British Literature and Culture , pp. 122 - 136Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023