Article
Details
Citation
Hunter A (2019) Kipling's Captains Courageous and the Anglo-Indian in America. English Literature in Transition, 62 (1), pp. 3-27. https://muse.jhu.edu/article/710486
Abstract
First paragraph: Writing in 1926, Thomas Beer argued that the "thread of imperial thinking" in Rudyard Kipling's work had in large measure supplied the moral and intellectual justification for the Spanish-American War. Later commentators have not shied away from Beer¡¯s extravagance. According to Christopher Hitchens, Kipling acted as "John the Baptist" to the age of American imperialism, persuading his fellow Anglo-Saxons of their racial birthright by "inculcat[ing] the idea of empire in the American mind." More recently, Patrick Brantlinger has turned to Kipling in an effort to parse the deep grammar of America¡¯s "Second Expeditionary Era," which is to say its recent and ongoing military interventions in the Middle East. Surveying the uses and abuses of "The White Man's Burden" over more than a century of U.S. foreign policy, Brantlinger hears its echo after 2001 in the battle-cries of Republican hawks and among neoconservative apologists for "America's new global empire." Judith Plotz, meanwhile, argues that if Kipling¡¯s purpose a century ago was to convince the U.S. of its "world-historical destiny," the function of his writing a hundred years later has been "relegitimizing imperialism" for the post-9/11 era.
Keywords
Rudyard Kipling; English Literature; American literature; transatlantic literature; travel writing; Captains Courageous; William James
Journal
English Literature in Transition: Volume 62, Issue 1
Status | Published |
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Publication date | 01/01/2019 |
Date accepted by journal | 21/12/2017 |
URL | |
Publisher | ELT Press |
Publisher URL | |
ISSN | 0013-8339 |
People (1)
Senior Lecturer, English Studies