Jeffrey Richards
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Popular imperialism and the image of the army in juvenile literature
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The dominance of soldier heroes and army subjects in popular culture in the last decades of the nineteenth century represented a distinct change of emphasis and accompanied a change in the nature of imperialism. In mid-nineteenth century 'free-trade imperialism' was dominant, the concept of a commercial and maritime empire with minimum territorial responsibilities and maximum profit. A new generation of boys' writers, notably Percy F. Westerman, George E. Rochester and Captain W. E. Johns promoted the air hero in juvenile literature. Hitherto juvenile literature had been dominated by the heroic image of the navy, the force that was an essential element in the mid-Victorian empire, with its commercial and maritime emphasis. G.A. Henty made clear his admiration for the imperial British army in the preface to Through Three Campaigns, which dramatised the relief of Chitral, the Tirah campaign and the relief of Coomassie.

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