Romanticism, History, and the Possibilities of Genre: Re-forming Literature 1789-1837

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Tilottama Rajan, Julia M. Wright
Cambridge University Press, 1998 M02 13 - 291 páginas
Romanticism has often been associated with the mode of lyric, or otherwise confined within mainstream genres. As a result, we have neglected the sheer diversity and generic hybridity of a literature that ranged from the Gothic novel to the national tale, from monthly periodicals to fictionalized autobiography. In this volume leading scholars of the period explore the ways in which the Romantics developed genre from a taxonomical given into a cultural category, so as to make it the scene of an ongoing struggle between fixed norms and new initiatives. Focusing on non-canonical writers (such as Thelwall, Godwin and the novelists of the 1790s), or placing authors such as Wordsworth and Byron in a non-canonical context, these essays explore the psychic and social politics of genre from a variety of theoretical perspectives, while the introduction looks at how genre itself was rethought by Romantic criticism.

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Acerca del autor (1998)

Julia M. Wright is Professor of English at Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.

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