HomeWhat's On > England's 'island nationhood?' with Professor Lorna Hutson

England's 'island nationhood?' with Professor Lorna Hutson

A mythical black and white illustration of people jumping into the sea
A mythical black and white illustration of people jumping into the sea

Overview

How did early modern legal and poetic texts conjure an Anglo-British sea-empire when no 'Great Britain' existed?

Professor Lorna Hutson considers poets John Milton and Edmund Spenser, as well as English cartographers and lawyers, in the context of an international European concern with whether the seas should be 'common' to all nations. In the 17th century, the pressing question for European nations joining the race for overseas commercial empire was that of dominion over the sea, or of whether the sea was, according to the law of nations, res nullius or 'common property.'

The talk asks how we might rethink Milton's poetics of English freedom in the context of Anglo-imperial claims over British coastal waters, revealing the history we suppress when we speak of England in this period as an 'island nation'.

Entry to this event is free but bookings are essential.

Dates

19 Feb 2026
February 2026
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Map of the venue locationMap of the venue location
National Library of AustraliaParkes Place West, Parkes, Australian Capital Territory, AustraliaGet Directions
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