ABSTRACT

This book explores the hopes, desires, and imagined futures that characterized British radicalism in the 1790s, and the resurfacing of this sense of possibility in the following decades. The articulation of “Jacobin” sentiments reflected the emotional investments of men and women inspired by the French Revolution and committed to political transformation. The authors emphasize the performative aspects of political culture, and the spaces in which mobilization and expression occurred – including the club room, tavern, coffeehouse, street, outdoor meeting, theater, chapel, courtroom, prison, and convict ship. America, imagined as a site of republican citizenship, and New South Wales, experienced as a space of political exile, widened the scope of radical dreaming. Part 1 focuses on the political culture forged under the shifting influence of the French Revolution. Part 2 explores the afterlives of British Jacobinism in the year 1817, in early Chartist memorialization of the Scottish “martyrs” of 1794, and in the writings of E. P. Thompson. The relationship between popular radicals and the Romantics is a theme pursued in several chapters; a dialogue is sustained across the disciplinary boundaries of British history and literary studies. The volume captures the revolutionary decade’s effervescent yearning, and its unruly persistence in later years.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

part 1|178 pages

Seditious Hearts

chapter 1|35 pages

Playing at Revolution

British “Jacobin” Performance

chapter 2|32 pages

Everyday Life and Everyday Sedition

Situating Radical Identities

chapter 3|35 pages

“Thoughts That Flash Like Lightning”

Thomas Holcroft and Radical Theater

chapter 4|28 pages

“Equality and No King”

Sociability and Sedition

chapter 5|46 pages

Writing America from Newgate Prison, 1795

part 2|134 pages

Aftermaths and Recurrence

chapter 6|57 pages

1817

Return of the Suppressed

chapter 7|39 pages

“The Embers of Expiring Sedition”

Maurice Margarot, the Scottish Martyrs Monument, and Radical Memory across the South Pacific

chapter 8|36 pages

Among the Romantics

E. P. Thompson and the Poetics of Disenchantment