Romanticism: Romanticism and history |
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Contents
PART | 4 |
Godwin Burke and Caleb Williams | 21 |
Fire famine and slaughter | 37 |
Keats Shelley and the wealth of imagination | 57 |
Walter Scott and antiGallican minstrelsy | 89 |
Romanticism and its ideologies | 108 |
imagining Robespierre | 133 |
Keats and the politics of style | 163 |
Colonial space and the colonization of time in Scotts | 199 |
British Romantic Columbiads | 231 |
Mary Wollstonecraft William | 253 |
minds brains and | 301 |
vaccination romanticism | 322 |
Coleridge abjection | 344 |
a quantum leap in Shelleys process | 362 |
Living with the weather | 395 |
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Common terms and phrases
appears argues argument become believe Book British Byron Caleb Caleb Williams called Cambridge character claims close Coleridge Coleridge's concerned context continued critical cultural death described early effect England English essay example fact feelings figure finally France Godwin hand Highlands human Hunt idea ideology imagination interest Italy Jenner John Justice Keats Keats's language later letter lines literary living London means mind moral narrative nature never notes novel offers original Oxford passage past perhaps poem poet poetic poetry political possible Preface present Press principle published quoted radical reader reading reason reference Reflections relation represent response Robespierre Romantic Romanticism says Scott seems sense Shelley Shelley's slave social society Southey spirit suggests things thought tion turn University vision vols volume Wordsworth writing written