Apocalypse and Millennium in English Romantic Poetry

Apocalypse and Millennium in English Romantic Poetry
Author: Morton D. Paley
Publsiher: Clarendon Press
Total Pages: 338
Release: 1999-10-07
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780191584688

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The interrelationship of the ideas of apocalypse and millennium is a dominant concern of British Romanticism. The Book of Revelation provides a model of history in which apocalypse is followed by millennium, but in their various ways the major Romantic poets - Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Keats, and Shelley - question and even at times undermine the possibility of a successful secularization of this model. No matter how confidently the sequence of apocalypse and millennium seems to be affirmed in some of the major works of the period, the issue is always in doubt: the fear that millennium may not ensue emerges as a significant, if often repressed, theme in the great works of the period. Related to it is the tension in Romantic poetry between conflicting models of history itself: history as teleology, developing towards end time and millennium, and history as purposeless cycle. This subject-matter is traced through a selection of works by the major poets, partly through an exposition of their underlying intellectual traditions, and partly through a close examination of the poems themselves.

Eternity in British Romantic Poetry

Eternity in British Romantic Poetry
Author: Madeleine Callaghan
Publsiher: Liverpool University Press
Total Pages: 336
Release: 2022-05-13
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781800855625

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Eternity in British Romantic Poetry explores the representation of the relationship between eternity and the mortal world in the poetry of the period. It offers an original approach to Romanticism that demonstrates, against the grain, the dominant intellectual preoccupation of the era: the relationship between the mortal and the eternal. The project's scope is two-fold: firstly, it analyses the prevalence and range of images of eternity (from apocalypse and afterlife to transcendence) in Romantic poetry; secondly, it opens up a new and more nuanced focus on how Romantic poets imagined and interacted with the idea of eternity. Every poet featured in the book seeks and finds their uniqueness in their apprehension of eternity. From Blake’s assertion of the Eternal Now to Keats’s defiance of eternity, Wordsworth’s ‘two consciousnesses’ versus Coleridge’s capacious poetry, Byron’s swithering between versions of eternity compared to Shelleyan yearning, and Hemans’s superlative account of everlasting female suffering, each poet finds new versions of eternity to explore or reject. This monograph sets out a paradigm-shifting approach to the aesthetic and philosophical power of eternity in Romantic poetry.

Robert Pollok s The Course of Time and Literary Theodicy in the Romantic Age

Robert Pollok   s The Course of Time and Literary Theodicy in the Romantic Age
Author: Deryl Davis
Publsiher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 204
Release: 2023-11-17
Genre: Bibles
ISBN: 9781000993745

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This book explores the contexts and reception history of Robert Pollok’s religious epic The Course of Time (1827), one of the best- selling long poems of the nineteenth century, which has been almost entirely forgotten today. Widely read in the United States and across the British Empire, the poem’s combination of evangelical Calvinism, High Romanticism, and native Scottishness proved irresistible to many readers. This monograph traces the poem’s origins as a defense of Biblical authority, divine providence, and religious orthodoxy (against figures like Byron and Joseph Priestley) and explores the reasons for The Course of Time’s enormous, decades- long popularity and later precipitous decline. A close reading of the poem and an examination of its reception history offers readers important insights into the dynamic relationship between religion and wider culture in the nineteenth century, the uses of literature as a vehicle for theological argument and theodicy, and the important but often overlooked role that religion played in literary— and, particularly, Scottish— Romanticism. This work will appeal to scholars of religious history, literary history, Evangelicalism, Romanticism, Scottish literature, and nineteenth- century culture.

The Cambridge Introduction to British Romantic Poetry

The Cambridge Introduction to British Romantic Poetry
Author: Michael Ferber
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 261
Release: 2012-04-26
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780521769068

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An engaging guide to reading, understanding and enjoying Romantic verse, designed for students approaching the period for the first time.

Romanticism and Millenarianism

Romanticism and Millenarianism
Author: T. Fulford
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 248
Release: 2002-01-11
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780230107205

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Expectation of the millennium was widespread in English society at the end of the eighteenth century. The essays in this volume explore how exactly, this expectation shaped, and was shaped by, the literature, art, and politics of the period we now call romantic. An expanded and rehistorized canon of writers and artists is assembled, a group united by a common tendency to use figurations of the millennium to interrogate and transform the worlds in which they lived and moved. Coleridge, Cowper, Blake, and Byron are placed in new contexts created by original research into the artistic and political subcultures of radical London, into the religious sects surrounding the Richard Brothers and Joanna Southcott, and into the cultural and political contexts of orientalism and empire.

English Romantic Writers and the West Country

English Romantic Writers and the West Country
Author: N. Roe
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 335
Release: 2010-05-28
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780230281455

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Long confounded with a monolithic British entity or misrepresented as 'Lakers' and 'Cockneys', the diverse regional forms of 'English Romanticism' are ripe for reassessment. Ranging west of a line between the Wye at Tintern and Jane Austen's Chawton, this book offers a first reconfiguration of Romantic culture in terms of English regional identity.

Writing Romantic Climate Change

Writing Romantic Climate Change
Author: Anya Heise-von der Lippe
Publsiher: transcript Verlag
Total Pages: 275
Release: 2024-06-30
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9783839472750

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In the Romantic period, women writers developed specific aesthetics and writing strategies in their engagements with climate change and climate catastrophe. Anya Heise-von der Lippe draws on intersectional feminist and ecocritical approaches to highlight gender as a complicating category in Romantic engagements with these topics. She addresses the ways in which gendered critical framings continue to resonate in current Anthropocene discourses that use Romantic conceptualizations of »Nature«, impacting contemporary approaches to the relationship between humans and non-humans in the ongoing climate catastrophe.

Romanticism Romanticism belief and philosophy

Romanticism  Romanticism  belief  and philosophy
Author: Michael O'Neill,Mark Sandy
Publsiher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 362
Release: 2006
Genre: European literature
ISBN: 0415247268

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