Romantic poetry and literary coteries : the dialect of the tribe
First Statement of Responsibility
Tim Fulford
EDITION STATEMENT
Edition Statement
First edition
.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC
Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
Palgrave
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Specific Material Designation and Extent of Item
x, 264 pages
SERIES
Series Title
Nineteenth-century major lives and letters
NOTES PERTAINING TO TITLE AND STATEMENT OF RESPONSIBILITY
Text of Note
the dialect of the tribe
TOPICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT
Entry Element
English poetry
Entry Element
Romanticism
Entry Element
Literature and society
Entry Element
LITERARY CRITICISM / General
Entry Element
LITERARY CRITICISM / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh
Entry Element
LITERARY CRITICISM / Gothic & Romance
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CLASSIFICATION
Class number
PR
Book number
590
Classification Record Number
.
F86
PERSONAL NAME - PRIMARY RESPONSIBILITY
Entry Element
Fulford, Tim, 1962-
PERSONAL NAME - ALTERNATIVE RESPONSIBILITY
Entry Element
Includes bibliographical references and index
Entry Element
Machine generated contents note: -- Introduction PART I: "A SECT OF POETS": THE DIALECT OF FRIENDSHIP IN SOUTHEY, COLERIDGE, AND THEIR CIRCLES 1. The Politicization of Allusion in Early Romanticism: Mary Robinson and the Bristol Poets 2. Brothers in Lore: Fraternity and Priority in Thalaba, "Christabel," "Kubla Khan" 3. Signifying Nothing: Coleridge's Visions of 1816 - Anti-Allusion and the Poetic Fragment 4. Positioning The Missionary: Poetic Circles and the Development of Colonial Romance PART II: THE "RURAL TRIBE": LABORING CLASS POETS AND THE TRADITION5. The Production of a Poet: Robert Bloomfield, his Patrons, and his Publishers 6. Iamb yet what Iamb: Allusion and Delusion in John Clare's Asylum Poems PART III: THE LINGO OF LONDONERS: THE "COCKNEY SCHOOL" 7. Romanticism Lite: Talking, Walking and Name dro pping in the Cockney Essay 8. Allusions of Grandeur: Prophetic Authority and the Romantic City.