From the birth of the museum to the explosion of mass-produced
illustrated books, the Romantic period (c. 1770-1840) was a moment
of rapid change and fruitful experimentation in the fields of art
and literature alike. New advances in print production encouraged a
wider range of readers to engage with literary forms that opened a
path into the once aristocratic field of the visual arts. This
Companion captures the way recent engagements with visual studies
have reshaped how we approach and understand the boundaries between
print and visual culture in the period. It brings together 27
research-led chapters that offer a detailed account of the
productive, if sometimes tense, interactions between emergent forms
of intermedial expression that were redefining culture in the
Romantic period -- as they continue to do today.
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