2012
DOI: 10.1215/10829636-1571939
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Utopia, Ireland, and the Tudor Shock Doctrine: Spenser’s Vision of Capitalist Imperialism

Abstract: Edmund Spenser’s A View of the Present State of Ireland is one of the most notorious works in the imperial archive, yet its fantasy of annihilating reform, or what might now be called “creative destruction,” schemes a highly specific kind of colonial project driven by novel kinds of economic motive. This essay considers how A View redeploys utopian literary forms in the colonial setting so as to envision unimpeded, accelerated “primitive accumulation,” that violent process of dispossession that defines the agr… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
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“…The Scots were sending coals to Newcastle, but they were also sending French luxury goods which they gained through their commercial privileges in France. Hogan writes about English imperialism in Ireland in the Tudor period. She considers Edmund Spenser's A view of the present state of Ireland and its underlying economic ideas of capital accumulation and the colonial project.…”
Section: –1700mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Scots were sending coals to Newcastle, but they were also sending French luxury goods which they gained through their commercial privileges in France. Hogan writes about English imperialism in Ireland in the Tudor period. She considers Edmund Spenser's A view of the present state of Ireland and its underlying economic ideas of capital accumulation and the colonial project.…”
Section: –1700mentioning
confidence: 99%