Law, Equity and Romantic Writing

Law, Equity and Romantic Writing

Author: Michael Demson

Publisher: Edinburgh University Press

Published: 2024-09-30

Total Pages: 451

ISBN-13: 1399500406

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This provocative and timely volume examines the activity of seeking justice through literature during the 'age of revolutions' from 1750 to 1850 - a period which was marked by efforts to expand political and human rights and to rethink attitudes towards poverty and criminality. While the chapters revolve around legal topics, they concentrate on literary engagements with the experience of the law, revealing how people perceived the fairness of a given legal order and worked with and against regulations to adjust the rule of law to the demands of conscience. The volume updates analysis of this conflict between law and equity by drawing on the concept of 'epistemic injustice' to describe the harm done to personal identity and collective flourishing by the uneven distribution of resources and the wish to punish breaches of order. It shows how writing and reading can foment inquiries into the meanings of 'justice' and 'equity' and aid efforts to humanise the rule of law.


Law, Equity and Romantic Writing

Law, Equity and Romantic Writing

Author: Michael Demson

Publisher:

Published: 2024-09-30

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781399500371

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

[headline]Explores the pursuit of justice through the processes of writing, reading and interpreting in Enlightenment and Romantic-period literature This provocative and timely volume examines the activity of seeking justice through literature during the 'age of revolutions' from 1750 to 1850 - a period which was marked by efforts to expand political and human rights and to rethink attitudes towards poverty and criminality. While the chapters revolve around legal topics, they concentrate on literary engagements with the experience of the law, revealing how people perceived the fairness of a given legal order and worked with and against regulations to adjust the rule of law to the demands of conscience. The volume updates analysis of this conflict between law and equity by drawing on the concept of 'epistemic injustice' to describe the harm done to personal identity and collective flourishing by the uneven distribution of resources and the wish to punish breaches of order. It shows how writing and reading can foment inquiries into the meanings of 'justice' and 'equity' and aid efforts to humanise the rule of law. [bio]Michael Demson is Professor of English at Sam Houston State University. He co-edited, with Christopher Clason, Romantic Automata: Exhibitions, Figures, Organisms (2020) and with Regina Hewitt, Commemorating Peterloo: Violence, Resilience and Claim-making during the Romantic Era (2019). His graphic novel, Masks of Anarchy: From Percy Shelley to the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, was published in 2013. Regina Hewitt is Professor of English at the University of South Florida. Her most recent publications include Commemorating Peterloo: Violence, Resilience and Claim-Making during the Romantic Era, co-edited with Michael Demson (2019) and an edition of Lawrie Todd for the Edinburgh Edition of the Works of John Galt (2023). Hewitt was formerly Co-Editor of the European Romantic Review and she now serves as a Consulting Editor for that journal. In 2023, she was elected Chair of the John Galt Society.


Blasphemy and Politics in Romantic Literature

Blasphemy and Politics in Romantic Literature

Author: Paul Whickman

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2020-06-06

Total Pages: 219

ISBN-13: 3030465705

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This book argues for the importance of blasphemy in shaping the literature and readership of Percy Bysshe Shelley and of the Romantic period more broadly. Not only are perceptions of blasphemy taken to be inextricable from politics, this book also argues for blasphemous ‘irreverence’ as both inspiring and necessitating new poetic creativity. The book reveals the intersection of blasphemy, censorship and literary property throughout the ‘Long Eighteenth Century’, attesting to the effect of this connection on Shelley’s poetry more specifically. Paul Whickman notes how Shelley’s perceived blasphemy determined the nature and readership of his published works through censorship and literary piracy. Simultaneously, Whickman crucially shows that aesthetics, content and the printed form of the physical text are interconnected and that Shelley’s political and philosophical views manifest themselves in his writing both formally and thematically.


Romanticism and the Rule of Law

Romanticism and the Rule of Law

Author: Mark L. Barr

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2021-08-06

Total Pages: 248

ISBN-13: 3030748782

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This book frames British Romanticism as the artistic counterpart to a revolution in subjectivity occasioned by the rise of "The Rule of Law" and as a traumatic response to the challenges mounted against that ideal after the French Revolution. The bulk of this study focuses on Romantic literary replies to these events (primarily in the work of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Blake), but its latter stages also explore how Romantic poetry's construction of the autonomous reading subject continues to influence legal and literary critical reactions to two modern crises in the rule of law: European Fascism and the continuing instability of legal interpretive strategy.


Atonement and Self-Sacrifice in Nineteenth-Century Narrative

Atonement and Self-Sacrifice in Nineteenth-Century Narrative

Author: Jan-Melissa Schramm

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2012-06-21

Total Pages: 309

ISBN-13: 1139510835

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Jan-Melissa Schramm explores the conflicted attitude of the Victorian novel to sacrifice, and the act of substitution on which it depends. The Christian idea of redemption celebrated the suffering of the innocent: to embrace a life of metaphorical self-sacrifice was to follow in the footsteps of Christ's literal Passion. Moreover, the ethical agenda of fiction relied on the expansion of sympathy which imaginative substitution was seen to encourage. But Victorian criminal law sought to calibrate punishment and culpability as it repudiated archaic models of sacrifice that scapegoated the innocent. The tension between these models is registered creatively in the fiction of novelists such as Dickens, Gaskell and Eliot, at a time when acts of Chartist protest, national sacrifices made during the Crimean War, and the extension of the franchise combined to call into question what it means for one man to 'stand for', and perhaps even 'die for', another.


The Writing of History and the Study of Law

The Writing of History and the Study of Law

Author: Donald R. Kelley

Publisher: Taylor & Francis

Published: 2024-10-28

Total Pages: 338

ISBN-13: 1040246796

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This second volume of essays by Professor Kelley takes the study of history as its starting point, then extends explorations into adjacent fields of legal, political, and social thought to confront some of the larger questions of the modern human sciences. The first group of papers examine the historiography of the Protestant Reformation and then of the Romantic and Victorian periods; the last section focuses on the legal tradition and its interpretation in relation to social and cultural, as well as historical thought, in the period from the Renaissance to the French Revolution. Throughout, the author’s interest is to analyse how people at different times have viewed their past - and reconstructed and utilised it in the service of their present concerns.


Gender, Surveillance, and Literature in the Romantic Period

Gender, Surveillance, and Literature in the Romantic Period

Author: Lucy E. Thompson

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2021-12-30

Total Pages: 128

ISBN-13: 1000532453

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Romantic-era literature offers a key message: surveillance, in all its forms, was experienced distinctly and differently by women than men. Gender, Surveillance, and Literature in the Romantic Period examines how familiar and neglected texts internalise and interrogate the ways in which targeted, asymmetric, and often isolating surveillance made women increasingly and uncomfortably visible in a way that still resonates today. The book combines the insights of modern surveillance studies with Romantic scholarship. It provides readers with a new context in which to understand Romantic-period texts and looks critically at emerging paradigms of surveillance directed at marginal groups, as well as resistance to such monitoring. Works by writers such as Jane Austen, Charlotte Smith, and Joanna Baillie, as well as Lord Byron and Thomas De Quincey, give a new perspective on the age that produced the Panopticon. This book is designed to appeal to a wide readership, and is aimed at students and scholars of surveillance, literature, Romanticism, and gender politics, as well as those interested in important strands of women’s experience not only for the additional layers they reveal about the Romantic era but also for their relevance to current debates around asymmetries of power within gendered surveillance.


Defending Privilege

Defending Privilege

Author: Nicole Mansfield Wright

Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press

Published: 2020-03-10

Total Pages: 225

ISBN-13: 1421433737

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

As a result, Defending Privilege offers a counterhistory to scholarship on the novel's capacity to motivate the promulgation of human rights and champion social ascendance through the upwardly mobile realist character.