Romantics, Rebels, and Reactionaries: English Literature and Its Background, 1760-1830

Front Cover
Oxford University Press, 1982 - Literary Criticism - 213 pages
This study of the Romantics--Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Austen, Scott, Bryon, Shelley, and Keats--places these richly varied writers into their proper historical setting. Butler relates the French and American Revolution, the Napoleonic Wars, the expansion of agriculture, trade, andindustry, and growing economic and social pressures to the cultural forces which shaped their work. She reveals the common factors which engaged the separate efforts of so many individual creative minds, and the fierce personal and artistic politics of an age in the midst of profound change.Demonstrating that the literature produced during this dynamic, restless time is not as homogenous as is generally assumed, Butler illuminates the ways in which these various experimental works reflected radically new sensibilities and aspirations.

Contents

Introduction
1
The Arts in an Age of Revolution 17601790
11
Blake
39
Coleridge
69
Jane Austen and Walter Scott
94
the Shelley circle its creed and
113
from Wordsworth to Keats
138
Romantic Novel Romantic Prose
155
the Question of Romanticism in England
178
Chronology
188
Suggestions for Further Reading
198
Index
205

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