British State Romanticism Authorship, Agency, and Bureaucratic Nationalism

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Synopsis

British State Romanticism contends that changing definitions of state power in the late Romantic period propelled authors to revisit the work of literature as well as the profession of authorship. Traditionally, critics have seen the Romantics as imaginative geniuses and viewed the supposedly less imaginative character of their late work as evidence of declining abilities. Frey argues, in contrast, that late Romanticism offers an alternative aesthetic model that adjusts authorship to work within an expanding and bureaucratizing state. She examines how Wordsworth, Coleridge, Austen, Scott, and De Quincey portray specific state and imperial agencies to debate what constituted government power, through what means government penetrated individual lives, and how non-governmental figures could assume government authority. Defining their work as part of an expanding state, these writers also reworked Romantic structures such as the imagination, organic form, and the literary sublime to operate through state agencies and to convey membership in a nation.

Book details

Author:
Anne Frey
ISBN:
9780804773485
Related ISBNs:
9780804762281
Publisher:
Stanford University Press
Pages:
216
Reading age:
Not specified
Includes images:
No
Date of addition:
2022-05-27
Usage restrictions:
Copyright
Copyright date:
2009
Copyright by:
the Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University. 
Adult content:
No
Language:
English
Categories:
Language Arts, Literature and Fiction