| James Treadwell - 2005 - 280 pages
The word 'autobiography' is a late eighteenth-century coinage; yet by 1826 it was used as the title for a multi-volume anthology of self-writing, and in 1834 Thomas Carlyle ... | |
| Benjamin Brice - 2007 - 248 pages
Ben Brice examines Coleridge's poetry and prose between 1795 and 1825 in the context of important philosophical and theological debates with which the poet was familiar. He ... | |
| Nicholas Reid - 2006 - 216 pages
Reid, to demonstrate the centrality of concrete form for Coleridge, giving an integrated account of Coleridge's theory (including terms like 'symbol' and 'organic form') and ... | |
| Nicholas Reid - 2006 - 214 pages
In his convincingly argued book, Nicholas Reid shows just how central Coleridge's theories of imagination, form, and symbol were to Coleridge's metaphysics. What distinguishes ... | |
| Gavin Hopps, Jane Stabler - 2006 - 284 pages
Covering the entire field of Romanticism from its eighteenth-century origins in the writing of William Cowper to late-twentieth-century manifestations in the work of Wallace ... | |
| Gavin Hopps, Jane Stabler - 2006 - 280 pages
The relationship between literature and religion is one of the most groundbreaking and challenging areas of Romantic studies. Covering the entire field of Romanticism from its ... | |
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