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Title New romanticisms : theory and critical practice / edited by David L. Clark and Donald C. Goellnicht
Published Toronto, Ont. : University of Toronto Press, ©1994

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Description 1 online resource (xii, 303 pages) : illustrations
Series Theory/culture
Theory/culture series.
Contents Discriminations : romanticism in the wake of deconstruction / David L. Clark and Donald C. Goellnicht -- The web of human things : narrative and identity in Alastor / Tilottama Rajan -- Baffled narrative in Julian and Maddalo / Shelley Wall -- Keats's "Realm of Flora" / Alan Bewell -- The politics of reading and writing : periodical reviews of Keats's Poems (1817) / Donald C. Goellnicht -- Symptom and scene in Freud and Wordsworth / J. Douglas Kneale -- Against theological technology : Blake's "Equivocal worlds" / David L. Clark -- Promises, promises : social and other contracts in the English Jacobins (Godwin/Inchbald) / Ian Balfour -- Romanticism's real women / Jean Wilson -- Romanticism unbound / Asha Varadharajan
Summary What is the fate of Romantic studies in the wake of deconstruction and post-structuralism? In an attempt to answer this question, Clark and Goellnicht have brought together nine essays that represent a cross-section of the diverse critical scene in Romantic studies today. These essays reflect the thinking of a younger generation of Canadian scholars - those who came of age while the lines of the current debate about the future of Romantic studies were being drawn. They call for a renewed sense of the plurality of Romanticisms, deliberately avoiding the suggestion that the focus of Romantic studies should simply shift from the rhetoric of Romantic texts to the culture of Romanticism. As a whole, the collection highlights the many ways in which contemporary theory has complicated our conception of Romanticism. Yet Romantic texts are not merely read through theory; they are shown to be sites of various forms of theorization themselves. Above all, the essays reveal the conflicting pressures at work within and among Romantic writers, whose texts are characterized by multiple strands of significance that entwine but do not build towards a synthesis. The scholars represented here deliberately avoid constructing a new master-narrative for Romantic studies. Designed to provide an indication of the different directions that Romantic studies are currently headed in, beyond the totalizing opposition which would see deconstruction secede to historicism, New Romanticisms emphasizes the plurality of critical positions available to the contemporary scholar
Notes Based on a conference held at McMaster University in Oct. 1990 under the auspices of the English Association's annual seminar
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references in notes at chapter ends, and index
Notes Master and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002. http://purl.oclc.org/DLF/benchrepro0212 MiAaHDL
digitized 2010 HathiTrust Digital Library committed to preserve pda MiAaHDL
Print version record
Subject English literature -- 19th century -- History and criticism -- Congresses
Romanticism -- Great Britain -- Congresses
LITERARY CRITICISM -- General.
LITERARY CRITICISM -- European -- English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh.
English literature
Romanticism
Literatur
Romantik
Great Britain
Englisch.
Genre/Form Electronic books
Conference papers and proceedings
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Form Electronic book
Author Clark, David L., 1955- editor.
Goellnicht, Donald C., 1953-2019, editor.
ISBN 9781442677647
1442677643