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This 2005 collection of essays challenges the traditional
conception that British Romanticism was rooted in nature and rural
life, by showing that much of what was new about Romanticism was
born in the city. The essays examine the works and events of the
Romantic period from the point of view of the urban world, where
rapid developments in population, industry, communication, trade,
and technology set the stage and the tone for many of the great
achievements in literature and culture. The great metropolis
appears as both fact and figure: London is its paradigm, but the
metropolitan perspective is also borrowed and projected elsewhere.
In this volume, some of the most exciting critics of Romanticism
explore diverse cultural productions from poems and paintings, to
exhibition sites, panoramas, and political organizations to do
long-overdue justice to the place of the city - both as topic and
as location - in British Romanticism.
More than any other period of British literature, Romanticism is
strongly identified with a single genre. Romantic poetry has been
one of the most enduring, best loved, most widely read and most
frequently studied genres for two centuries and remains no less so
today. This Companion offers a comprehensive overview and
interpretation of the poetry of the period in its literary and
historical contexts. The essays consider its metrical, formal, and
linguistic features; its relation to history; its influence on
other genres; its reflections of empire and nationalism, both
within and outside the British Isles; and the various implications
of oral transmission and the rapid expansion of print culture and
mass readership. Attention is given to the work of less well-known
or recently rediscovered authors, alongside the achievements of
some of the greatest poets in the English language: Wordsworth,
Coleridge, Blake, Scott, Burns, Keats, Shelley, Byron and Clare.
The Romantic period was one of the most creative, intense and
turbulent periods of English literature, an age marked by
revolution, reaction, and reform in politics, and by the invention
of imaginative literature in its distinctively modern form. This
History presents an engaging account of six decades of literary
production around the turn of the nineteenth century. Reflecting
the most up-to-date research, the essays are designed both to
provide a narrative of Romantic literature, and to offer new and
stimulating readings of the key texts. One group of essays
addresses the various locations of literary activity - both in
England and, as writers developed their interests in travel and
foreign cultures, across the world. A second set of essays traces
how texts responded to great historical and social change. With a
comprehensive bibliography, timeline and index, this volume will be
an important resource for research and teaching in the field.
This 2005 collection of essays challenges the traditional
conception that British Romanticism was rooted in nature and rural
life, by showing that much of what was new about Romanticism was
born in the city. The essays examine the works and events of the
Romantic period from the point of view of the urban world, where
rapid developments in population, industry, communication, trade,
and technology set the stage and the tone for many of the great
achievements in literature and culture. The great metropolis
appears as both fact and figure: London is its paradigm, but the
metropolitan perspective is also borrowed and projected elsewhere.
In this volume, some of the most exciting critics of Romanticism
explore diverse cultural productions from poems and paintings, to
exhibition sites, panoramas, and political organizations to do
long-overdue justice to the place of the city - both as topic and
as location - in British Romanticism.
The Romantic period was one of the most creative, intense and
turbulent periods of English literature, an age marked by
revolution, reaction, and reform in politics, and by the invention
of imaginative literature in its distinctively modern form. This
History presents an engaging account of six decades of literary
production around the turn of the nineteenth century. Reflecting
the most up-to-date research, the essays are designed both to
provide a narrative of Romantic literature, and to offer new and
stimulating readings of the key texts. One group of essays
addresses the various locations of literary activity - both in
England and, as writers developed their interests in travel and
foreign cultures, across the world. A second set of essays traces
how texts responded to great historical and social change. With a
comprehensive bibliography, timeline and index, this volume will be
an important resource for research and teaching in the field.
More than any other period of British literature, Romanticism is
strongly identified with a single genre. Romantic poetry has been
one of the most enduring, best loved, most widely read and most
frequently studied genres for two centuries and remains no less so
today. This Companion offers a comprehensive overview and
interpretation of the poetry of the period in its literary and
historical contexts. The essays consider its metrical, formal, and
linguistic features; its relation to history; its influence on
other genres; its reflections of empire and nationalism, both
within and outside the British Isles; and the various implications
of oral transmission and the rapid expansion of print culture and
mass readership. Attention is given to the work of less well-known
or recently rediscovered authors, alongside the achievements of
some of the greatest poets in the English language: Wordsworth,
Coleridge, Blake, Scott, Burns, Keats, Shelley, Byron and Clare.
Wordsworth is England's greatest poet of the French Revolution: he
witnessed some of its events first hand, participated in its
intellectual and social ambitions, and eventually developed his
celebrated poetic campaign in response to its enthusiasms. But how
should that response be understood? Combining careful interpretive
analysis with wide-ranging historical scholarship, Chandler
presents a challenging new account of the political views implicit
in Wordsworth's major works-in The Prelude, above all, but also in
the central lyrics and shorter narrative poems. Central to the
discussion, which restores Wordsworth to both the French and
English contexts in which he matured, is a consideration of his
relation to Rousseau and Burke. Chandler maintains that by the time
Wordsworth set forth his "program for poetry" in 1798, he had
turned away from the Rousseauist idea of nature that had informed
his early republican writings. He had already become a poet of what
Burke called "second nature"-human nature cultivated by custom,
habit, and tradition-and an opponent of the quest for first
principles that his friend Coleridge could not forsake. In his
analysis of the poetry, Chandler suggests that even Wordsworth's
most apparently private moments, the lyrical "spots of time,"
ideologically embodied the uncalculated habits of an oral narrative
discipline and a native English mind.
Biologists, historians, lawyers, art historians, and literary
critics all voice arguments in the critical dialogue about what
constitutes evidence in research and scholarship. They examine not
only the constitution and "blurring" of disciplinary boundaries,
but also the configuration of the fact-evidence distinctions made
in different disciplines and historical moments; the relative
function of such concepts as "self-evidence," "experience," "test,"
"testimony," and "textuality" in varied academic discourses; and
the way "rules of evidence" are themselves products of historical
developments.
The essays and rejoinders are by Terry Castle, Lorraine Daston,
Carlo Ginzburg, Ian Hacking, Mark Kelman, R. C. Lewontin, Pierre
Vidal-Naquet, Mary Poovey, Donald Preziosi, Simon Schaffer, Joan W.
Scott, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, and Barbara Herrnstein Smith.
The critical responses are by Lauren Berlant, James Chandler, Jean
Comaroff, Arnold I. Davidson, Harry D. harootunian, Elizabeth
Helsinger, Thomas C. Holt, Francoise Meltzer, Robert J. Richards,
Lawrence Rothfield, Joel Snyder, Cass R. Sunstein, and William
Wimsatt.
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One and Done
James Chandler
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R485
R418
Discovery Miles 4 180
Save R67 (14%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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We seem to see melodrama everywhere we look--from the soliloquies
of devastation in a Dickens novel to the abject monstrosity of
Frankenstein's creation, and from Louise Brooks's exaggerated
acting in Pandora's Box to the vicissitudes endlessly reshaping the
life of a brooding Don Draper. This anthology proposes to address
the sometimes bewilderingly broad understandings of melodrama by
insisting on the historical specificity of its genesis on the stage
in late-eighteenth-century Europe. Melodrama emerged during this
time in the metropolitan centers of London, Paris, Vienna, and
Berlin through stage adaptations of classical subjects and gothic
novels, and they became famous for their use of passionate
expression and spectacular scenery. Yet, as contributors to this
volume emphasize, early melodramas also placed sound at center
stage, through their distinctive--and often
disconcerting--alternations between speech and music. This book
draws out the melo of melodrama, showing the crucial dimensions of
sound and music for a genre that permeates our dramatic, literary,
and cinematic sensibilities today. A richly interdisciplinary
anthology, The Melodramatic Moment will open up new dialogues
between musicology and literary and theater studies.
In the middle of the eighteenth century, something new made itself
felt in European culture - a tone or style that came to be called
the sentimental. The sentimental mode went on to shape not just
literature, art, music, and cinema, but people's very structures of
feeling, their ways of doing and being. In what is sure to become a
critical classic, "An Archaeology of Sympathy" challenges Sergei
Eisenstein's influential account of Dickens and early American film
by tracing the unexpected history and intricate strategies of the
sentimental mode and showing how it has been reimagined over the
past three centuries. James Chandler begins with a look at Frank
Capra and the Capraesque in American public life, then digs back to
the eighteenth century to examine the sentimental substratum
underlying Dickens and early cinema alike. With this surprising
move, he reveals how literary spectatorship in the eighteenth
century anticipated classic Hollywood films such as "Capra's It
Happened One Night", "Mr. Deeds Goes to Town", and "It's a
Wonderful Life". Chandler then moves forward to romanticism and
modernism - two cultural movements often seen as defined by their
rejection of the sentimental - examining how authors like Mary
Shelley, Joseph Conrad, James Joyce, and Virginia Woolf actually
engaged with sentimental forms and themes in ways that left a mark
on their work. Reaching from Laurence Sterne to the Coen brothers,
"An Archaeology of Sympathy" casts new light on the long eighteenth
century and the novelistic forebears of cinema and our modern
world.
The year 1819 was the "annus mirabilis" for many British Romantic
writers, and the "annus terribilis" for demonstrators protesting
the state of parliamentary representation. In 1819 Keats wrote what
many consider his greatest poetry. This was the year of Shelley's
"Prometheus Unbound", "The Cenci", and "Ode to the West Wind."
Wordsworth published his most widely reviewed work, "Peter Bell",
and the craze for Walter Scott's historical novels reached its
zenith. Many of these writings explicitly engaged with the politics
of 1819, in particular the great movement for reform that came to a
head that August with an unprovoked attack on unarmed men, women,
and children in St Peter's Field, Manchester, a massacre that
journalists dubbed "Peterloo". But the year of Peterloo in British
history is notable for more than just the volume, value, and
topicality of its literature. Writing from 1819, as the author
argues, was acutely aware not only of its place in history, but
also of its place "as" history - a realization of a literary
"spirit of the age" that resonates strongly with the current
"return to history" in literary studies. Chandler explores the ties
between Romantic and contemporary historicism, such as the shared
tendency to seize a single dated event as both important on its own
and as a "case" testing general principles. To animate these
issues, Chandler offers a series of cases of built around key texts
from 1819. Like the famous sonnet by Shelley from which it takes
its name, this book simultaneously creates and critiques its own
place in history. It sets out to be not only a crucial study of
Romanticism, but also a major contribution to an understanding of
historicism.
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