Rethinking historicism : critical readings in romantic history
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Bibliographic Information
Rethinking historicism : critical readings in romantic history
Blackwell, 1989
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Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In this collection of critical essays, four scholars of Romanticism address the problematic concept of "history" within the specific context of Romantic studies. In so doing, the authors interrogate the methods and assumptions of both "new" and "old" historicism, providing alternative ways of reading the literary past. The four essays in this volume emerged in response to a range of circumstances and as episodes within the independent critical actions. These essays were written by men and women from both the British and the American academy, Romanticists of different scholarly generations, differently situated within their universities and within the discipline at large. These institutional and cultural differences are reflected in the variety of questions, methods, tones and proposals generated by this collection of writing.
Table of Contents
- The New Historicism - What's in a Name?, Marjorie Levinson
- Repossessing the Past - The Case for an Open Literary History, Marilyn Butler
- The Third World of Criticism, Jerome McCann
- Keats and Critique, Paul Hamilton.
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