This paper aims to explore the idea that the formulation of the modern discipline of economics involved a discourse on the romantic sublime. By using the example of Thomas De Quincey's Confessions of an English Opium-Eater (1821), it will address the issue of money and knowledge as two formative experiences in De Quincey's life. Unlike his literary model, William Wordsworth, who is eager to build up his ‘egotistical sublime’ (Keats's phrase), De Quincey is intent on registering his traumatic memories and resultant disorders and neuroses. Thus, he builds up a new type of romantic subjectivity where his personal accumulation of debt can be read as an encounter with the sublime, and it runs parallel to Britain's ever-increasing national debt. ...
Thomas De Quincey is commonly considered a key figure in the history of crime fiction, notably thank...
My thesis explores the potential and the peril of Romantic literature's increasingly complex forms ...
This essay situates Thomas De Quincey's essay 'On the Opium and the China Question' published in Bla...
This article studies two representative late-Romantic texts in which discourses of aesthetics and ec...
Romantic literature reveals a persistent attention to everyday material things, such as a sheepfold,...
Romantic literature reveals a persistent attention to everyday material things, such as a sheepfold,...
This paper explores Thomas De Quincey's seminal text Confessions of an English Opium Eater, examinin...
none1noThomas De Quincey's essays on murder considered as one of the fine arts have been the object ...
The unconventional nature of De Quincey's works, fragmentary and digressive, often factual in conten...
Long considered a marginal author within the Romantic canon operating in the shadows of Wordworth an...
Thomas De Quincey is commonly considered a key figure in the history of crime fiction, notably thank...
Thomas De Quincey is commonly considered a key figure in the history of crime fiction, notably thank...
'Life for De Quincey was either angels ascending on vaults of cloud or vagrants shivering on the cit...
ii De Quincey'.s writing has already been thoroughly examined from the point of view of his cri...
First pub. without Kant in his Miscellaneous essays and Problem of a perpetual peace (v. 12), Logic ...
Thomas De Quincey is commonly considered a key figure in the history of crime fiction, notably thank...
My thesis explores the potential and the peril of Romantic literature's increasingly complex forms ...
This essay situates Thomas De Quincey's essay 'On the Opium and the China Question' published in Bla...
This article studies two representative late-Romantic texts in which discourses of aesthetics and ec...
Romantic literature reveals a persistent attention to everyday material things, such as a sheepfold,...
Romantic literature reveals a persistent attention to everyday material things, such as a sheepfold,...
This paper explores Thomas De Quincey's seminal text Confessions of an English Opium Eater, examinin...
none1noThomas De Quincey's essays on murder considered as one of the fine arts have been the object ...
The unconventional nature of De Quincey's works, fragmentary and digressive, often factual in conten...
Long considered a marginal author within the Romantic canon operating in the shadows of Wordworth an...
Thomas De Quincey is commonly considered a key figure in the history of crime fiction, notably thank...
Thomas De Quincey is commonly considered a key figure in the history of crime fiction, notably thank...
'Life for De Quincey was either angels ascending on vaults of cloud or vagrants shivering on the cit...
ii De Quincey'.s writing has already been thoroughly examined from the point of view of his cri...
First pub. without Kant in his Miscellaneous essays and Problem of a perpetual peace (v. 12), Logic ...
Thomas De Quincey is commonly considered a key figure in the history of crime fiction, notably thank...
My thesis explores the potential and the peril of Romantic literature's increasingly complex forms ...
This essay situates Thomas De Quincey's essay 'On the Opium and the China Question' published in Bla...