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Angels on the Edge of the
World. By Kathy Lavezzo. Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press,
2006. Pp. xvi + 191. $29.95
Various literary accounts of nationalism constitute, as Bruce Holsinger
recently noted, "one the most fertile and innovative subfields…in
our discipline, generating a wealth" of scholarship characterized "by
its wide-ranging historical sensibility and its methodological rigor"
(MLQ, 66 [2005], 120). Kathy Lavezzo's new book, Angels on
the Edge of the World, is no exception, offering a lucid and compelling
account of England's longstanding sense of itself as, quite literally,
at the world's edge. Throughout this well-written 144-page study, Lavezzo
is keen to show how England's documented sense of its own marginal status
functioned both productively and ambivalently. On the one hand England,
remarkably, devoted considerable resources to map-making: "It was," she
evocatively reminds us, "the island deemed to be beyond the world that
most often made images of that world during the Middle Ages" (p. 46).
On the other, England's otherwordliness proved a source for anxieties
of barbarism as well as for triumphalist geographies of England's special
status, an anxious singularity that would propel certain iterations of
that nation's imperial ambitions.
Patricia Clare Ingham
Indiana University |
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