Living as an Author in the Romantic Period

Living as an Author in the Romantic Period
Title Living as an Author in the Romantic Period PDF eBook
Author Matthew Sangster
Publisher Springer Nature
Pages 379
Release 2021-01-27
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 303037047X

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This book explores how authors profited from their writings in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, contending that the most tangible benefits were social, rather than financial or aesthetic. It examines authors’ interactions with publishers; the challenges of literary sociability; the vexed construction of enduring careers; the factors that prevented most aspiring writers (particularly the less privileged) from accruing significant rewards; the rhetorical professionalisation of periodicals; and the manners in which emerging paradigms and technologies catalysed a belated transformation in how literary writing was consumed and perceived.

Life

Life
Title Life PDF eBook
Author Denise Gigante
Publisher Yale University Press
Pages 333
Release 2009-05-26
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0300155581

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Gigante offers a way to read ostensibly difficult poetry and reflects on the natural-philosophical idea of organic form and the discipline of literary studies.

Romantic Women's Life Writing

Romantic Women's Life Writing
Title Romantic Women's Life Writing PDF eBook
Author Susan Civale
Publisher
Pages 0
Release 2023-09-26
Genre
ISBN 9781526174666

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Explores how the publication of women's life writing influenced the reputation of its writers and of the genre itself during the long nineteenth century

Memorializing Animals during the Romantic Period

Memorializing Animals during the Romantic Period
Title Memorializing Animals during the Romantic Period PDF eBook
Author Chase Pielak
Publisher Routledge
Pages 178
Release 2016-04-22
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 131709784X

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Early nineteenth-century British literature is overpopulated with images of dead and deadly animals, as Chase Pielak observes in his study of animal encounters in the works of Charles and Mary Lamb, John Clare, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Lord Byron, and William Wordsworth. These encounters, Pielak suggests, coincide with anxieties over living alongside both animals and cemeteries in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth-centuries. Pielak traces the linguistic, physical, and psychological interruptions occasioned by animal encounters from the heart of communal life, the table, to the countryside, and finally into and beyond the wild cemetery. He argues that Romantic period writers use language that ultimately betrays itself in beastly disruptions exposing anxiety over what it means to be human, what happens at death, the consequences of living together, and the significance of being remembered. Extending his discussion past an emphasis on animal rights to an examination of animals in their social context, Pielak shows that these animal representations are both inherently important and a foreshadowing of the ways we continue to need images of dead and deadly Romantic beasts.

The Reading Nation in the Romantic Period

The Reading Nation in the Romantic Period
Title The Reading Nation in the Romantic Period PDF eBook
Author William St Clair
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 806
Release 2004-07-08
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9780521810067

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Publisher Description

The Cambridge Companion to Women's Writing in the Romantic Period

The Cambridge Companion to Women's Writing in the Romantic Period
Title The Cambridge Companion to Women's Writing in the Romantic Period PDF eBook
Author Devoney Looser
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 275
Release 2015-03-12
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1316298310

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The Romantic period saw the first generations of professional women writers flourish in Great Britain. Literary history is only now giving them the attention they deserve, for the quality of their writings and for their popularity in their own time. This collection of new essays by leading scholars explores the challenges and achievements of this fascinating set of women writers, including Jane Austen, Mary Wollstonecraft, Ann Radcliffe, Hannah More, Maria Edgeworth, and Mary Shelley alongside many lesser-known female authors writing and publishing during this period. Chapters consider major literary genres, including poetry, fiction, drama, travel writing, histories, essays, and political writing, as well as topics such as globalization, colonialism, feminism, economics, families, sexualities, aging, and war. The volume shows how gender intersected with other aspects of identity and with cultural concerns that then shaped the work of authors, critics, and readers.

Living Forms

Living Forms
Title Living Forms PDF eBook
Author Bruce Haley
Publisher State University of New York Press
Pages 319
Release 2012-02-01
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0791487679

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Based on years of archival research in various British and American libraries, Living Forms examines the early nineteenth century's fascination with representations of the human form, particularly those from the past, which, having no adequate verbal explanatory text, are vulnerable to having their meanings erased by time. The author explores a variety of such representations and responses to them, including Coleridge's Shakespeare lectures, Hazlitt's essays on portraits, Keats's poems on mythic and sculpted figures, meditations by Byron's Childe Harold on the monuments of Italy, Felicia Hemans's verses on monuments to and by women, and Shelley's poems and letters on figures from Italy, Egypt, and other antique lands. Haley argues that in what has been called the "museum age," Romantics sought aesthetically to frame these figures as "living forms," mental images capable of realization in alternate modes or forms.