The Perils of Certain English Prisoners: Charles Dickens, Wilkie Collins and the limits of colonial government

Tickell, Alex (2013). The Perils of Certain English Prisoners: Charles Dickens, Wilkie Collins and the limits of colonial government. Nineteenth-Century Literature, 67(4) pp. 457–489.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1525/ncl.2013.67.4.457

Abstract

This essay considers the theme of the contract as a metonym for failed government in Charles Dickens’s and Wilkie Collins’s collaborative Christmas story The Perils of Certain English Prisoners (1857), written to commemorate the Indian ‘Mutiny’. Building on critical studies by Myron Magnet, Grace Moore and Lillian Nayder, and reviewing relevant contract theories of government in political philosophy, my analysis traces the proliferating tropes of the contract in this unusual narrative and suggests that as well as presenting a topical satire on circumlocutory colonial bureaucracy, these figures also encode Dickens’s suspicions about the sustainability of liberal forms of colonial rule. While noting further contexts for the contract-theme in The Perils, my paper goes on to suggest that, in replacing social-contractual and ‘constitutional’ identities with bonds of chivalric loyalty, the text inadvertently anticipates important changes in the idiom of colonial rule in India in the post-‘Mutiny’ period.

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