Romanticism: Comparative DiscoursesLarry Peer, Diane Hoeveler Routledge, 2016 M04 14 - 218 páginas First published in 2006. Exploring how discourse is figured in the texts of key European Romantic authors such as Wackenroder, Coleridge, Byron and Hugo, this volume offers nuanced readings of the under-explored syntactic, semantic, and ideological structures of Romantic works. Rather than proposing a new theoretical position on the issue of what constitutes Romantic discourse studies, the editors have commissioned essays that seek to capture aspects of this discursive field, building on previous scholarship to offer fresh ways of seeing how Romantic discourse matrices work. The volume is organized into three sections: Language and Romantic Discourse Systems; Women Writers and Romantic Constructions of Power; and Varieties of Revisionist Discourse in Romanticism. This title aims to expand the readers understand of Romantic modes of argumentation, and will be of interest to students of literature. |
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... gender roles within the family structure, and, finally, the construction of newly nationalistic countries that seek to justify the means they have each taken to modernize and secularize. Jeffrey Cox has observed, in relation to romantic ...
... genders that saw themselves as being at odds over the shape and power structure of the newly evolving bourgeois society. In fact, the operas, like dramas, actually function as cathartic forms, public rituals in which the middle class ...
... gender as a founding category of modern politics , culture and ideology , even though the revolutionary era's gender politics repressed women as subjects - they were excluded from citizenship in June 1793 — and attempted to reconfigure ...
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Contenido
Romantic Poetry and the Failure of Language | |
Fragile Boundaries in Coleridges Fears | |
Romantic Drama and the Discourse of Criminality | |
A Topo | |
The Second Soulless Sex? Mary Wollstonecraft and the Mahometan | |
Edgeworths Miltonic Allusions | |
Hemans Landon and Barret Browning Rewrite Friederike | |
Readerly Agency and the Discourse of History in The Antiquary | |
Epistolary Journal into Dramatic Poem | |
Index | |