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Lindsey Chappell - Temporal Forms and the Nineteenth-Century Mediterranean: Writing British Heritage in Ancient Lands

30 Jul 2025 2:25 PM | Anonymous

Temporal Forms and the Nineteenth-Century Mediterranean: Writing British Heritage in Ancient Lands
Lindsey Chappell

The Mediterranean is ubiquitous in nineteenth-century British literature, but this study is the first to fully recover and explore the region's centrality to Romantic and Victorian constructions of the past, the present, and the shape of time itself. Placing regions central to the making of Western cultural heritage, such as Italy and Greece, into context with one another and with European imperialism, Lindsey N. Chappell traces the contours of what she terms 'heritage discourse'–narrative that constructs or challenges imperial identities by reshaping antiquity–across nineteenth-century British texts. Heritage discourse functions via time, and often in counterintuitive and paradoxical ways. If assertions of political, cultural, and eventually racial supremacy were the end of this discourse, then time was the means through which it could be deployed and resisted. Chappell shows how historical narratives intervened in geopolitics, how antiquarianism sparked scientific innovation, and how classical and biblical heritage shaped British imperialism.

This project:

  • Proposes a new understanding of time in the nineteenth century as a constitutive element of narrative, a feature of lived experience, and a historical concept,
  • Shows how historical narratives intervened in geopolitics, how antiquarianism sparked scientific innovation, and how classical and biblical heritage shaped British imperialism,
  • Recovers the Mediterranean's centrality to Romantic and Victorian constructions of cultural, political, and racial identities and to the radical reinventions of time that defined the period.

Lindsey N. Chappell is Associate Professor of English at Georgia Southern University. She has published articles in Victorian Literature and Culture, ELH, SEL, Literature Compass, Victorian Review, and elsewhere. Her research has been funded by numerous organizations, including the Council for European Studies and the Armstrong Browning Library.

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