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Romantic Literature

Romantic Literature

Jennifer Breen

Mary Noble

Publication Date: 2002

Pages: 192

Brief, manageable and affordable, the books in the 'Contexts' series fill the gap in students' knowledge of the historical facts, literary associations and wider cultural climate of the main literary periods. As well as offering a background in relevant social history, these texts include selected extracts from original documents to give a full flavour of the period in question. The Romantic period was a turbulent time in which England changes from a primarily agricultural society to a modern industrial nation. The French Revolution, economic cycles of inflation and depression, and an enlarged and increasingly restless working class, created circumstances for profound social and political change. Looking at poetry and fiction against the 'spirit of the age', this book discusses issues of science and art, psychology and the supernatural, revolutionary politics and social vision, satire and morality, and at the same time provides an introduction to the work of Austen, Blake, Burns, Byron, Keats, Radcliffe, Shelley, Charlotte Smith, Mary Wollstonecraft, and William Wordsworth.

Table of Contents

  • Series editor’s preface
  • Acknowledgements
  • Introduction
  • Novels of the Romantic Age
  • Ballads and Lyric Poetry in Scotland
  • Literary Ballads and Lyrical Poetry in England
  • The Revival of the Sonnet
  • Satire in Romantic Literature
  • Science and Literature in the Romantic Age
  • British Literary Responses to the French Revolution
  • The ‘Canon’ of British Romantic Literature
  • Chronology of Authors of the Romantic Age
  • Suggestions for Further Reading