New Publication: Victorian Visions of War and Peace
- 15 November 2021
Victorian Visions of War & Peace: Aesthetics, Sovereignty & Violence in the British Empire, c. 1851–1900 by Sean Willcock, a new Paul Mellon Centre title, is now published and available to purchase from Yale University Press.
In an era that saw the birth of photography and the rise of the illustrated press, the British experience of their empire became increasingly defined by the processes and products of image-making.
Examining moments of military and diplomatic crisis, this book considers how artists and photographers operating 'in the field' helped to define British visions of war and peace. The Victorians increasingly turned to visual spectacle to help them compose imperial sovereignty. The British Empire was thus rendered into a spectacle of 'peace,' from world’s fairs to staged diplomatic rituals. Yet this occurred against a backdrop of incessant colonial war – campaigns which, far from being ignored, were in fact unprecedentedly visible within the cultural forms of Victorian society. Visual media thus shaped the contours of imperial statecraft and established many of the aesthetic and ethical frames within which the colonial violence was confronted.
An extract from this book was published in the latest issue of PMC Notes, read online here.