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Dive into the research topics where Michael Sanders is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael Sanders.


Visual Culture in Britain | 2018

God Save the Ecchoing Green: the uses of imaginary nostalgia in William Blake and Ray Davies

Michael Sanders

This article examines Blake’s importance for our understanding of a certain type of subaltern ‘Englishness’ which is characterised by ‘imaginary nostalgia’ and an attachment to the local, and exemplified by the trope of the village green. It compares representations of the green in the work of Blake and Ray Davies and the Kinks in order to demonstrate the political consequences which attend the reinscription of the local (the green) as the national (Englishness).


Archive | 2016

'No Laughing Matter: Chartism and the Limits of Satire'

Michael Sanders

The premise of this chapter is that the relative paucity of satire within Chartist cultural production demands explanation, particularly given the importance and vitality of satire within Regency radicalism. This discussion argues that the answer lies in an intersection of generic and historical factors. It begins by considering the relationship between satire’s formal properties and its political potential, before considering the extent to which cultural forces both intrinsic and extrinsic to Chartism acted as a powerful block on the mobilization of satirical energies. Finally, the chapter returns to the question of the extent to which literary forms encode historical (and thus political) possibilities. It maintains that satire depends on a binary structure that is increasingly at odds with Chartism’s own understanding of its historical situation, and that Chartist cultural production instead begins to elaborate triadic structures that will eventually issue in melodrama. In this respect, my analysis engages with a vital part of Sally Ledger’s work: namely, her understanding of the aesthetic as something that is simultaneously and inescapably both politicized and historicized. In addition, it explores a thesis that is implicit in Ledger’s Dickens and the Popular Radical Imagination: the idea that the movement from Regency radicalism to Chartism is characterized through the movement from satire to melodrama.


Social History | 2015

Reform Acts: Chartism, Social Agency and the Victorian Novel

Michael Sanders


Victorian Studies | 2012

God is our guide! our cause is just!: The National Chartist Hymn Book and Victorian Hymnody

Michael Sanders


Victorian Studies | 2016

Response: Strategic Presentism or Partisan Knowledges?

Elaine Freedgood; Michael Sanders


Journal of Victorian Culture | 2009

The Chartist Text in an Age of Digital Reproduction

Michael Sanders


Social History | 2018

The Chartist General: Charles James Napier, the conquest of Sind and imperial liberalism

Michael Sanders


Archive | 2017

The Guilty Game of Human Subjugation.: Religion as ideology in Thomas Cooper's 'The Purgatory of Suicides'

Michael Sanders


Archive | 2016

The Platform and the Stage: the Primary Aesthetics of Chartism

Michael Sanders


Archive | 2016

From “Technical” to “Cultural” Literacy: Reading and Writing in the British Chartist Movement

Michael Sanders

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