Napoleon in British Culture
c. 1815 - 1840
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Publishing:23rd Jul '26
£28.99
This title is due to be published on 23rd July, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

This book studies British cultural engagement with Napoleon Bonaparte from his 1815 surrender and time in British custody, until the return of his remains to France in 1840.
Adopting a chronological approach, James Gregory studies the British use of Bonaparte in various spheres – covering political, dramatic, literary, and visual culture, and popular entertainment over a 25-year period. Gregory acknowledges not only canonical literary treatments, but also appearances of the figure in novels, anecdotes, travelling shows, and private collections – in order to analyse contemporary fascination with Napoleon.
Centring on key themes such as responses to Napoleon’s presence on British territory, and later reactions to his death, Gregory also takes into account the influence of factors such as geography and gender, in order to craft a comprehensive picture of cultural engagement with Napoleon in the period 1815-40. Covering factors including the role of commemoration, the impact of Peterloo and Queen Caroline's death, and the rise of Romanticism, this book demonstrates how truly pervasive the myth of Napoleon became in 19th-century Britain.
Gregory has produced a remarkable piece of cultural history that eloquently demonstrates that when the 1843 Madame Tussaud’s Exhibition Catalogue proudly proclaimed that ‘everything connected with the late Emperor Napoleon belongs to British history’, they were not just speaking for themselves but for an entire generation. * The English Historical Review *
ISBN: 9781350428911
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
312 pages