ABSTRACT

How did romanticism define its relationship with its sources? How has romanticism since been understood and misunderstood across a range of cultural activities? These are among the questions taken up in this reexamination of the place of adaptation within romanticism. Renegotiating the cultural topography of the period and the place of romanticism in subsequent cultural history, the volume focuses on the adaptation of source material by romantic writers and the adaptation in subsequent periods of the tropes and ideologies associated with romanticism. In place of a hierarchical distinction between source and text, between ’romanticism’ and its contexts, the collection identifies distinct but overlapping and mutually constitutive genres such as the Gothic and romance. Whether their essays deal with early nineteenth-century periodical reviews, affordable editions of Pride and Prejudice aimed at the late nineteenth-century mass audience, or the ongoing cultural presence of romanticism in late twentieth- and early twenty-first-century debates about embryology and stem cell research, the contributors remain cognizant of the tension between the processes of adaptation and the apparent ideology of romantic originality.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

Adaptation, Mediation and Remediation

chapter 1|13 pages

‘Reason in China is not Reason in England'

Eighteenth-century Adaptations of China by Horace Walpole and Arthur Murphy

chapter 2|17 pages

Through a Glass Darkly

Gothic Adaptation in the Eighteenth-Century Novel

chapter 3|15 pages

Adapting Rights

Thomas Taylor's A Vindication of the Rights of Brutes

chapter 4|16 pages

Adapting to Dissect

Rhetoric and Representation in the Quarterly Reviews in the Romantic Period

chapter 5|13 pages

The Miniature Sublime

Later Fortunes of the Cockney Aesthetic

chapter 6|14 pages

The Beauties of Byron and Shelley

chapter 7|24 pages

‘In perfect volume form, Price Sixpence'

Illustrating Pride and Prejudice for a Late-Victorian Mass-Market

chapter 8|16 pages

The Imprisonment of Foucault

Remediating a Twentieth-Century ‘Romantic Intellectual'