The geopolitics of Shelley’s Laon and Cythna and The Revolt of Islam revolve around its half-mythical, half-historical Mediterranean setting. Centred in Argolis and the Golden City, the poem’s geography is a translation both of the clashing forces that shaped the French Revolution in the 1790s and of the mount- ing tensions between Greece and Turkey in the 1810s. It also references a broader Continental panorama of imperial–national struggles instigated by the restoration process decreed by the Congress of Vienna. Throwing light on Shelley’s engagement with Restoration-era politics, this essay reads the poem’s geogra- phy and recursive narrative structure as thematic-formal vehicles for reflecting on the Napoleonic aftermath as another epis...
International audienceThe clear thrust of Percy Bysshe Shelley's radical politics has generally been...
This essay expands current paradigms for understanding the function of the South in British Romantic...
The Revolt of Islam is one of the most favorite narrative poems of P.B.Shelley. It may be considered...
In Percy Bysshe Shelley's Laon and Cythna (1817), Cythna predicts the revolution she leads will spre...
This paper offers a close reading of the presence of Greece in Laon and Cythna (1817), Shelley’s lon...
The Revolt of Islam, Shelley's longest and most neglected major work, contains some of his most rigo...
The outbreak of the Greek Revolution of 1821 against the Ottoman Empire animated the radical Europea...
The outbreak of the Greek Revolution of 1821 against the Ottoman Empire animated the radical Europea...
The outbreak of the Greek Revolution of 1821 against the Ottoman Empire animated the radical Europea...
grantor: University of TorontoDuring the Romantic period, when a constant stream of distan...
grantor: University of TorontoDuring the Romantic period, when a constant stream of distan...
International audienceAfter a brief lexical survey of the words “boundary,” “bound(s),” “limits” and...
The history of the modern Mediterranean is a history of fracturing. Since the middle of the seventee...
The history of the modern Mediterranean is a history of fracturing. Since the middle of the seventee...
International audienceThe clear thrust of Percy Bysshe Shelley's radical politics has generally been...
International audienceThe clear thrust of Percy Bysshe Shelley's radical politics has generally been...
This essay expands current paradigms for understanding the function of the South in British Romantic...
The Revolt of Islam is one of the most favorite narrative poems of P.B.Shelley. It may be considered...
In Percy Bysshe Shelley's Laon and Cythna (1817), Cythna predicts the revolution she leads will spre...
This paper offers a close reading of the presence of Greece in Laon and Cythna (1817), Shelley’s lon...
The Revolt of Islam, Shelley's longest and most neglected major work, contains some of his most rigo...
The outbreak of the Greek Revolution of 1821 against the Ottoman Empire animated the radical Europea...
The outbreak of the Greek Revolution of 1821 against the Ottoman Empire animated the radical Europea...
The outbreak of the Greek Revolution of 1821 against the Ottoman Empire animated the radical Europea...
grantor: University of TorontoDuring the Romantic period, when a constant stream of distan...
grantor: University of TorontoDuring the Romantic period, when a constant stream of distan...
International audienceAfter a brief lexical survey of the words “boundary,” “bound(s),” “limits” and...
The history of the modern Mediterranean is a history of fracturing. Since the middle of the seventee...
The history of the modern Mediterranean is a history of fracturing. Since the middle of the seventee...
International audienceThe clear thrust of Percy Bysshe Shelley's radical politics has generally been...
International audienceThe clear thrust of Percy Bysshe Shelley's radical politics has generally been...
This essay expands current paradigms for understanding the function of the South in British Romantic...
The Revolt of Islam is one of the most favorite narrative poems of P.B.Shelley. It may be considered...