Romanticism and Millenarianism
Title | Romanticism and Millenarianism PDF eBook |
Author | T. Fulford |
Publisher | Springer |
Total Pages | 258 |
Release | 2002-01-11 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 0230107206 |
Expectation of the millennium was widespread in English society at the end of the eighteenth century. The essays in this volume explore how exactly, this expectation shaped, and was shaped by, the literature, art, and politics of the period we now call romantic. An expanded and rehistorized canon of writers and artists is assembled, a group united by a common tendency to use figurations of the millennium to interrogate and transform the worlds in which they lived and moved. Coleridge, Cowper, Blake, and Byron are placed in new contexts created by original research into the artistic and political subcultures of radical London, into the religious sects surrounding the Richard Brothers and Joanna Southcott, and into the cultural and political contexts of orientalism and empire.
Romantic Women Writers at the End of the World
Title | Romantic Women Writers at the End of the World PDF eBook |
Author | Orianne Smith |
Publisher | |
Total Pages | 598 |
Release | 2005 |
Genre | Apocalypse in literature |
ISBN |
Early Romanticism and Religious Dissent
Title | Early Romanticism and Religious Dissent PDF eBook |
Author | Daniel E. White |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Total Pages | 27 |
Release | 2007-01-25 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 1139462466 |
Religious diversity and ferment characterize the period that gave rise to Romanticism in England. It is generally known that many individuals who contributed to the new literatures of the late eighteenth century came from Dissenting backgrounds, but we nonetheless often underestimate the full significance of nonconformist beliefs and practices during this period. Daniel White provides a clear and useful introduction to Dissenting communities, focusing on Anna Barbauld and her familial network of heterodox 'liberal' Dissenters whose religious, literary, educational, political, and economic activities shaped the public culture of early Romanticism in England. He goes on to analyze the roles of nonconformity within the lives and writings of William Godwin, Mary Wollstonecraft, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and Robert Southey, offering a Dissenting genealogy of the Romantic movement.
Romanticism and Popular Magic
Title | Romanticism and Popular Magic PDF eBook |
Author | Stephanie Elizabeth Churms |
Publisher | Springer |
Total Pages | 303 |
Release | 2019-01-16 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 3030048101 |
This book explores how Romanticism was shaped by practices of popular magic. It seeks to identify the place of occult activity and culture – in the form of curses, spells, future-telling, charms and protective talismans – in everyday life, together with the ways in which such practice figures, and is refigured, in literary and political discourse at a time of revolutionary upheaval. What emerges is a new perspective on literature’s material contexts in the 1790s – from the rhetorical, linguistic and visual jugglery of the revolution controversy, to John Thelwall’s occult turn during a period of autobiographical self-reinvention at the end of the decade. From Wordsworth’s deployment of popular magic as a socially and politically emancipatory agent in Lyrical Ballads, to Coleridge’s anxious engagement with superstition as a despotic system of ‘mental enslavement’, and Robert Southey’s wrestling with an (increasingly alluring) conservatism he associated with a reliance on ultimately incarcerating systems of superstition.
William Gilbert and Esoteric Romanticism
Title | William Gilbert and Esoteric Romanticism PDF eBook |
Author | Paul Cheshire |
Publisher | Romantic Reconfigurations Stud |
Total Pages | 272 |
Release | 2018 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 1786941201 |
This first annotated edition of William Gilbert's enigmatic poem, The Hurricane: a Theosophical and Western Eclogue, with extended interpretative chapters informed by Gilbert's magical and astrological writings, shows how its dark materials fed the imaginations of his friends Coleridge, Wordsworth and Southey, in their formative years between 1795 and 1798.
Sexual Enjoyment in British Romanticism
Title | Sexual Enjoyment in British Romanticism PDF eBook |
Author | David Sigler |
Publisher | McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP |
Total Pages | 235 |
Release | 2015-03-01 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 0773597050 |
Debates about gender in the British Romantic period often invoked the idea of sexual enjoyment: there was a broad cultural concern about jouissance, the all-engulfing pleasure pertaining to sexual gratification. On one hand, these debates made possible the modern psychological concept of the unconscious - since desire was seen as an uncontrollable force, the unconscious became the repository of disavowed enjoyment and the reason for sexual difference. On the other hand, the tighter regulation of sexual enjoyment made possible a vast expansion of the limits of imaginable sexuality. In Sexual Enjoyment and British Romanticism, David Sigler shows how literary writers could resist narrowing gender categories by imagining unregulated enjoyment. As some of the era's most prominent thinkers - including Edmund Burke, Mary Wollstonecraft, Mary Robinson, Joanna Southcott, Charlotte Dacre, Jane Austen, and Percy Bysshe Shelley - struggled to understand sexual enjoyment, they were able to devise new pleasures in a time of narrowing sexual possibilities. Placing Romantic-era literature in conversation with Lacanian psychoanalytic theory, Sexual Enjoyment in British Romanticism reveals the fictive structure of modern sexuality, makes visible the diversity of sexual identities from the period, and offers a new understanding of gender in British Romanticism.
Romantic Women Writers, Revolution, and Prophecy
Title | Romantic Women Writers, Revolution, and Prophecy PDF eBook |
Author | Orianne Smith |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Total Pages | 297 |
Release | 2013-03-28 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 1107027063 |
This book challenges our current critical understanding of the relations between gender, genre, and literary authority in this period.