1st Edition

Magic, Science, and Empire in Postcolonial Literature The Alchemical Literary Imagination

By Kathleen Renk Copyright 2012
196 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

196 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

196 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book examines the ways in which contemporary British and British postcolonial writers in the after-empire era draw connections between magic (defined here as Renaissance Hermetic philosophy) and science. Writers such as Tom Stoppard, Zadie Smith, and Margaret Atwood critique both imperial science, or science used in service to empire, and what Renk calls "imperical science," a distortion of... Read more

Introduction  1. The Alchemical Imagination  2. Victorian Science: Debating Darwin and Natural History  3. Hermeticism ‘Gone Underground’: Victorian Science and Pseudo Science in the Age of Empire  4. Superseding Newtonian Determinism: Chaos, Quantum Heresies and Hyperspace in Post-Imperial Literature  5. Paradise as Chaos: The Deconstruction of Determinism Conclusion  Bibliography  Index

Biography

Kathleen Renk is an Associate Professor of English at Northern Illinois University. The author of Caribbean Shadows and Victorian Ghosts: Women's Writing and Decolonization (Virginia, 1999) and critical essays on the work of A.S. Byatt, Wilson Harris, Peter Carey, and Pauline Melville, she teaches British modernist and postcolonial literatures.