Revisionary Gleam: De Quincey, Coleridge, and the High Romantic ArgumentLiverpool University Press, 2000 M01 1 - 311 pages This study includes much new information on Thomas De Quincey and his critical engagement with Coleridge, Wordsworth, Burke, Kant and others. The author subtly and convincingly brings overlooked dimensions of De Quincey’s politics to the fore, and examines essays often ignored. The impressive reading of the Liverpool circle and the 1803 Diary should lead to reassessments of this period in De Quincey’s development. |
Contents
Coleridgean Reorientations | 1 |
Radical Politics | 31 |
De Quinceys Discovery | 71 |
71 | 109 |
English Nationalism and | 153 |
Politics of Style | 197 |
New Directions | 261 |
B Lessons of the French Revolution | 285 |
293 | |
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achieved aesthetic appear argument attitude Biographia Blackwood's Burke Burke's Cambridge Coleridge and Wordsworth Coleridge's Coleridge's criticisms context Convention of Cintra criticisms of Wordsworth critique crucial Currie's Danish Origin Despite desynonymization Diary earlier Edinburgh Edinburgh Review edition English essay favour French Revolution German literature German philosophy imagination Immanuel Kant important indicate influence interest issue Jacobinism Japp journal judgement Kant's knowledge Lake poets language letter Lindop linguistic literary Liverpool London Lyrical Ballads Manchester Grammar School marginalia modern nature opium Opium-Eater Oxford philosophical plagiarisms poem Preface publication Quincey to Wordsworth Quincey's critical Quincey's early Quincey's later Quincey's political Quincey's reading radical reading of Lyrical reform relation Review revolutionary rhetoric Romantic Romanticism Roscoe seen significance Southey style sublime suggest suppression sympathy Tait's Thomas De Quincey tion Tooke's Tory understanding University Press Westmorland Gazette Whig Whiggism words Wordsworth and Coleridge Wordsworth's poetry Wordsworth's theory Wordsworthian WPrW writings