The Fate of Progress in British Romanticism
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:7th Apr '22
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
What did Romantic writers mean when they wrote about "progress" and "perfection"? This book shows how Romantic writers inventively responded to familiar ideas about political progress which they inherited from the eighteenth century. Whereas earlier writers such as Voltaire and John Millar likened improvements in political institutions to the progress of the sciences or refinement of manners, the novelists, poets, and political theorists examined in this book reimagined politically progressive thinking in multiple genres. While embracing a commitment to optimistic improvement--increasing freedom, equality, and protection from injury--they also cultivated increasingly visible and volatile energies of religious and political dissent. Earlier narratives of progress tended not only to edit and fictionalize history but also to agglomerate different modes of knowledge and practice in their quest to describe and prescribe uniform cultural improvement. But romantic writers seize on internal division and take it less as an occasion for anxiety, exclusion, or erasure, and more as an impetus to rethink the groundwork of progress itself. Political entities, from Percy Shelley's plans for political reform to Charlotte Smith's motley associations of strangers in The Banished Man, are progressive because they advance some version of collective utility or common good. But they simultaneously stake a claim to progress only insofar as they paradoxically solicit contending vantage points on the criteria for the very public benefit which they passionately pursue. The "majestic edifices" of Wordsworth's imagined university in The Prelude embrace members who are "republican or pious," not to mention the recalcitrant "enthusiast" who is the poet himself.
No suitable quote * Jamison Kantor, Ohio State University, Eighteenth-Century Fiction *
Canuel's monograph offers a valuable addition to scholarship on the intersection of politics and aesthetics in the Romantic age, which it usefully updates and at times directly challenges. * Modern Language Studies *
Mark Canuel's The Fate of Progress in British Romanticism and the contributors to Romantic Ethics and the "Woke" Romantics implicitly or explicitly examine this question but with different approaches and answers. Canuel does not look to the Romantic period to speak to the social issues that concern progressives today. Instead, he argues that the Romantics offer a different resource for us in their very conceptualization of progress. * Anne Frey, EUROPEAN ROMANTIC REVIEW *
ISBN: 9780192895301
Dimensions: 241mm x 164mm x 21mm
Weight: 540g
252 pages