Romanticism, Self-Canonization, and the Business of Poetry

Romanticism, Self-Canonization, and the Business of Poetry

by Michael Gamer
Romanticism, Self-Canonization, and the Business of Poetry

Romanticism, Self-Canonization, and the Business of Poetry

by Michael Gamer

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Overview

This is the first book to examine how Romantic writers transformed poetic collections to reach new audiences. In a series of case studies, Michael Gamer shows Romantic poets to be fundamentally social authors: working closely with booksellers, intimately involved in literary production, and resolutely concerned with current readers even as they presented themselves as disinterested artists writing for posterity. Exploding the myth of Romantic poets as naive, unworldly, or unconcerned with the practical aspects of literary production, this study shows them instead to be engaged with intellectual property, profit and loss, and the power of reprinting to reshape literary reputation. Gamer offers a fresh perspective on how we think about poetic revision, placing it between aesthetic and economic registers and foregrounding the centrality of poetic collections rather than individual poems to the construction of literary careers.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781316611531
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 07/11/2019
Series: Cambridge Studies in Romanticism , #114
Pages: 330
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Michael Gamer is Associate Professor of English at the University of Pennsylvania. He is the author of Romanticism and the Gothic: Genre, Reception, and Canon Formation (Cambridge, 2000) and Associate Editor of the journal EIR: Essays in Romanticism.

Table of Contents

Introduction: re-collections intranquility; 1. Corpus, canon, and the self-collected author; 2. Subscription reprinting: the third and fifth Elegiac Sonnets; 3. 'Bell's poetics': from The Florence Miscellany to the books of The World; 4. 'A local habitation and a name': remaking Lyrical Ballads; 5. Robert Southey's laureate policy; 6. Shelley incinerated: the heart of The Posthumous Poems.
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