Romantic Sociability: Social Networks and Literary Culture in Britain, 1770-1840Gillian Russell, Clara Tuite Cambridge University Press, 20 de abr. de 2006 - 280 páginas Challenging the assumptions which underlie an understanding of the "Romantics" as solitary and anti-sociable, this volume introduces sociability to the field of Romantic literary and cultural studies. The volume focuses in particular on sociability in British radical culture of the 1790s as it moved away from eighteenth-century ideas of a masculine "public sphere", and on the gendered nature of sociability. In a range of essays the volume transforms our understanding of Romanticism by exploring the social networks of Romantic figures including Barbauld, Burney, Coleridge, Godwin, Hazlitt, Priestley, Thelwall and Wollstonecraft. |
Conteúdo
Sociability and the international republican conversation | 24 |
sociability and sedition | 43 |
Anna Barbaulds | 62 |
Mrs Barbauld | 82 |
Robert Merry | 104 |
the sociability | 123 |
Hazlitt and the sociability of theatre | 145 |
Anne Listers style | 186 |
shopping and womens sociability | 211 |
237 | |
259 | |
Outras edições - Ver todos
Romantic Sociability: Social Networks and Literary Culture in Britain, 1770-1840 Gillian Russell,Clara Tuite Prévia não disponível - 2002 |
Termos e frases comuns
Aikin Anna Barbauld Anne Anne Lister aristocratic associated Beaufort Buildings British Burke Burney Byron century chapter character circle clubs coffee-house Coleridge Coleridge's conversation criticism Debating Societies Della Cruscans diaries discourse discussion Dissenting eighteenth eighteenth-century English Della Cruscans Enlightenment essay fashionable female Frances Burney French Revolution friends friendship Frost gender genre Habermas Habermas's Hazlitt Holcroft human Ibid ideal Jacobin John John Aikin Johnson Joseph Priestley journal Klancher Lady lecture-room lecturing letter Lister literary London Magazine Mary Wollstonecraft masculine Memoirs Merry Merry's mode moral Oxford passions performance period Philp Piozzi poem poet poetic poetry Political Justice Priestley's print culture public sphere published radical rational reading republican Robert Merry Romantic Romanticism Rousseau Rutt Samuel Taylor Coleridge sexual Shaftesbury Shelley sociability space Spectator stage style suggests tavern theatre theatrical Thelwall Thelwall's Thomas Holcroft Wakefield Warrington Warrington Academy William Godwin women Wordsworth writing
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