The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism: Volume 5, Romanticism
The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism Series

Coordinator: Brown Marshall

This volume, first published in 2000, is the standard reference work on literary criticism in the period c.1780–c.1830.

Language: English
Cover of the book The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism: Volume 5, Romanticism

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The cambridge history of literary criticism volume 5 romanticism
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506 p. · 15.4x23 cm · Paperback

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The cambridge history of literary criticism volume 5 romanticism
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506 p. · 15.8x23.6 cm · Hardback
This volume of the celebrated Cambridge History of Literary Criticism series, first published in 2000, addresses literary criticism of the Romantic period, chiefly in Europe. Its seventeen chapters are by internationally-respected academics and explore a range of key topics and themes. The book is designed to help readers locate essential information and to develop approaches and viewpoints for a deeper understanding of issues discussed by Romantic critics or those that were fundamental to their works. Primary and secondary bibliographies provide a guide for further research. The coverage of the book, focusing on themes and genres but drawing in discussion of the key authors, makes it the standard reference work on the period c.1780?c.1830. These remain in many ways the formative years for modern Anglo-American as well as European literary history.
Introduction; 1. Classical standards in the Romantic period Paul H. Fry; 2. Innovation and modernity Alfredo De Paz (trans. Albert Sbragia); 3. The French Revolution David Simpson; 4. Transcendental philosophy and romantic criticism David Simpson; 5. Nature Helmut J. Schneider; 6. Scientific models Joel Black; 7. Religion and literature E. S. Shaffer; 8. Romantic language theory and the art of understanding Kurt Mueller-Vollmer; 9. The Romantic transformation of rhetoric David Wellbery; 10. Romantic irony Gary Handwerk; 11. Theories of genre Tilottama Rajan; 12. Theory of the novel Marshall Brown; 13. The impact of Shakespeare Jonathan Arac; 14. The vocation of criticism and the crisis of the republic of letters Jon Klancher; 15. Women, gender, and literary criticism Theresa M. Kelley; 16. Literary history and historicism David Perkins; 17. Literature and the other arts Herbert Lindenberger; Bibliography; Index.
Marshall Brown in Professor of English at the University of Washington.