ABSTRACT

This book visits the Romantic legacy that was central to the development of literature and culture from the 1830s onward. Although critical accounts have examined aspects of this long history of indebtedness, this is the first study to survey both Nineteenth and Twentieth century culture.

The authors consider the changing notion of Romanticism, looking at the diversity of its writers, the applicability of the term, and the ways in which Romanticism has been reconstituted. The chapters cover relevant historical periods and literary trends, including the Romantic Gothic, the Victorian era, and Modernism as part of a dialectical response to the Romantic legacy. Contributors also examine how Romanticism has been reconstituted within postmodern and postcolonial literature as both a reassessment of the Modernist critique and of the imperial contexts that have throughout this time-frame underpinned the Romantic legacy, bringing into focus the contemporaneity of Romanticism and its political legacy. This collection reveals the diversity and continuing relevance of the genre in new and exciting ways, offering insights into writers such as Browning, Ruskin, Pater, Wilde, Lewis, MacNeice, and Auster.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

part I|69 pages

Early and Mid-Victorian

chapter 1|16 pages

Hazlitt as a Gateway to Nineteenth-Century Ekphrasis

The Quarrel with Reynolds Revisited

chapter 2|21 pages

Ruskin's Keats

A Joy For Ever (and its Price in the Market), “The Mystery of Life and its Arts”, and the Resonance of the Severn Circle

chapter 3|14 pages

Anatomising the “Case”

Shelley's The Cenci, Browning's The Ring and the Book, and the Origins of the Dramatic Monologue

chapter 4|14 pages

Burney's Wanderers and Brontë's Silent Revolts

Revolution, Vagrancy, and Gender

part II|64 pages

Late Victorian and Edwardian

chapter 6|16 pages

The New Pygmalions

Idealism and Disillusionment in Hazlitt's Liber Amoris and Lee's Miss Brown

chapter 7|13 pages

Late Victorian Responses to Romanticism

Wordsworth, Wilde's Poems, and Other Romantic Inheritances

chapter 8|15 pages

Pole to Pole

Romantic Apocalypse at the Victorian Fin de Siècle

part III|66 pages

Modernism and Postmodernism

chapter 10|14 pages

The Neo-Romantic Wyndham Lewis

chapter 11|19 pages

Neo-Romantic Visionaries

Picturing Britain in the Second World War

chapter 12|13 pages

The Last of the Romantics?

The Accidental Investigator in Postmodern Detective Fiction

part IV|64 pages

Postcolonial and Theoretical Approaches

chapter 13|16 pages

“Dark Interpretations”

Romanticism's Ambiguous Legacy in India

chapter 14|14 pages

Diaspora and its Romanticism(s)

The Fiction of Bharati Mukherjee and Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

chapter 15|15 pages

Romanticism and Unhappiness

Melancholy as a Romantic Legacy

chapter 16|15 pages

Present Prophesy

The Transformation of Romantic Rhetoric in and by New Media