Sara Coleridge

Sara Coleridge

Author: J. Barbeau

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2014-06-18

Total Pages: 378

ISBN-13: 1137430850

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Known as the daughter of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Sara Coleridge's manuscripts, letters, and other writings reveal an original thinker in dialogue with major literary and cultural figures of nineteenth-century England. Here, her writings on beauty, education, and faith uncover aspects of Romantic and Victorian literature, philosophy, and theology.


Ben Jonson in the Romantic Age

Ben Jonson in the Romantic Age

Author: Tom Lockwood

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

Published: 2005-09-22

Total Pages: 270

ISBN-13: 0199280789

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This is the first book to explore Ben Jonson's place in the Romantic Age. It presents a varied, mobile, and contested Jonson and views the Romantic Age anew through a fresh lens. It will interest students of both the Renaissance and Romantic periods.


The Boy-Man, Masculinity and Immaturity in the Long Nineteenth Century

The Boy-Man, Masculinity and Immaturity in the Long Nineteenth Century

Author: Pete Newbon

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2018-09-04

Total Pages: 364

ISBN-13: 1137408146

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This book explores the evolution of male writers marked by peculiar traits of childlike immaturity. The ‘Boy-Man’ emerged from the nexus of Rousseau’s counter-Enlightenment cultural primitivism, Sensibility’s ‘Man of Feeling’, the Chattertonian poet maudit, and the Romantic idealisation of childhood. The Romantic era saw the proliferation of boy-men, who congregated around such metropolitan institutions as The London Magazine. These included John Keats, Leigh Hunt, Charles Lamb, Hartley Coleridge, Thomas De Quincey and Thomas Hood. In the period of the French Revolution, terms of childishness were used against such writers as Wordsworth, Keats, Hunt and Lamb as a tool of political satire. Yet boy-men writers conversely used their amphibian child-adult literary personae to critique the masculinist ideologies of their era. However, the growing cultural and political conservatism of the nineteenth century, and the emergence of a canon of serious literature, inculcated the relegation of the boy-men from the republic of letters.