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dc.contributor.authorReed, Adam Douglas Evelyn
dc.date.accessioned2022-01-05T16:30:02Z
dc.date.available2022-01-05T16:30:02Z
dc.date.issued2022-01-31
dc.identifier276922852
dc.identifierb70fb0b8-35bc-4feb-b2bf-9ea80c8d163d
dc.identifier85122318101
dc.identifier000737067100001
dc.identifier.citationReed , A D E 2022 , ' Sympathy for Oswald Mosley : politics of immersion and historical resemblance in the moral imagination of an English literary society ' , Comparative Studies in Society and History , vol. 64 , no. 1 , pp. 63-90 . https://doi.org/10.1017/S0010417521000396en
dc.identifier.issn0010-4175
dc.identifier.otherORCID: /0000-0001-8917-6341/work/105956283
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10023/24600
dc.descriptionFunding information: Received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme (Grant agreement 683033).en
dc.description.abstractThe mid-twentieth-century English novelist, Henry Williamson, wrote nature stories but also romantic and historical fiction, including a fifteen-volume saga that contains a largely favorable characterization of Oswald Mosley, the leader of the British Union of Fascists. This essay considers the challenge of such a fascist character through the prism of the literary imagination of Williamson readers, and more specifically through my longstanding ethnographic work with an English literary society constituted in the author’s name. I am centrally concerned with how literary society members deal with the positive depiction of the Mosley-based character through the stages of the reading process that they identify and describe. Do the immersive values commonly attached to their solitary reading culture, for instance, assist or further problematize that engagement? What role does their subsequent, shared practice of character evaluation play? As well as considering the treatment of characters as objects of sympathy, I explore the vital sympathies that for literary society members tie characters together with historical persons. Across the essay I dialogue with anthropological literature on exemplars, historical commentaries on the fascist cult of leadership, and finally with the philosophical claims that Nussbaum makes for the moral and political consequences of fiction reading.
dc.format.extent28
dc.format.extent203605
dc.language.isoeng
dc.relation.ispartofComparative Studies in Society and Historyen
dc.subjectSolitary and shared readingen
dc.subjectMoral exemplarsen
dc.subjectLiterary characteren
dc.subjectHistorical fictionen
dc.subjectAnthropology and literatureen
dc.subjectGN Anthropologyen
dc.subjectPR English literatureen
dc.subjectT-NDASen
dc.subjectMCCen
dc.subject.lccGNen
dc.subject.lccPRen
dc.titleSympathy for Oswald Mosley : politics of immersion and historical resemblance in the moral imagination of an English literary societyen
dc.typeJournal articleen
dc.contributor.institutionUniversity of St Andrews. Centre for Pacific Studiesen
dc.contributor.institutionUniversity of St Andrews. Social Anthropologyen
dc.identifier.doi10.1017/S0010417521000396
dc.description.statusPeer revieweden


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