The article explores Mary Shelley’s approach to the sublime and the picturesque in her two travel narratives, History of a Six Weeks’ Tour and Rambles in Germany and Italy. These two accounts of her travels through France, Switzerland, Italy, and Germany reveal her debt to a variety of contemporary sources aimed at exploring the nature of a sublime or picturesque experience. The analysis illustrates the complexity of Mary Shelley’s approach: while moving beyond the “egotistical sublime” typified by some key passages from William Wordsworth’s Prelude, her travel narratives reveal a variety of approaches to nature and the landscape, aimed at bridging present and past, personal experience and recent historical events. ...
grantor: University of TorontoDuring the Romantic period, when a constant stream of distan...
In this article I consider Mary Shelley's use of figuration, examining its characteristic forms. In ...
The subject of this article is the landscape of the mind. At the turn of the eighteenth and nineteen...
International audienceThis article focuses on the typologies of the sublime in Mary Shelley's travel...
This project puts forth the argument that when the late eighteenth century’s taste for nature and pi...
Percy Bysshe Shelley joined the deluge of sightseers that poured onto the Continent after Napoleon's...
This essay deals with the theme of landscape and of course nature in Mary Wollstonecraft's Letters w...
The article presents a brief overview of selected stylistic means utilized by Mary Shelley in depict...
This dissertation focuses on a Romanticism that was profoundly global in scope, and examines the bou...
This article offers a new perspective on William Gilpin’s picturesque travel writing by focusing on ...
Sublime concepts about mountain landscape in the Romantic literature: Rousseau, Goethe, Tieck, Mary ...
In this article, the author examines the definition of Sublime as provided by Edmund Burke, and appl...
The article focuses on a series of Romantic travelogues in order to explore the role the concept of ...
This dissertation examines the shift between object and image in popular and philosophical attitudes...
This article proposes a comparative reading of Katherine Mansfield’s and Virginia Woolf’s writing in...
grantor: University of TorontoDuring the Romantic period, when a constant stream of distan...
In this article I consider Mary Shelley's use of figuration, examining its characteristic forms. In ...
The subject of this article is the landscape of the mind. At the turn of the eighteenth and nineteen...
International audienceThis article focuses on the typologies of the sublime in Mary Shelley's travel...
This project puts forth the argument that when the late eighteenth century’s taste for nature and pi...
Percy Bysshe Shelley joined the deluge of sightseers that poured onto the Continent after Napoleon's...
This essay deals with the theme of landscape and of course nature in Mary Wollstonecraft's Letters w...
The article presents a brief overview of selected stylistic means utilized by Mary Shelley in depict...
This dissertation focuses on a Romanticism that was profoundly global in scope, and examines the bou...
This article offers a new perspective on William Gilpin’s picturesque travel writing by focusing on ...
Sublime concepts about mountain landscape in the Romantic literature: Rousseau, Goethe, Tieck, Mary ...
In this article, the author examines the definition of Sublime as provided by Edmund Burke, and appl...
The article focuses on a series of Romantic travelogues in order to explore the role the concept of ...
This dissertation examines the shift between object and image in popular and philosophical attitudes...
This article proposes a comparative reading of Katherine Mansfield’s and Virginia Woolf’s writing in...
grantor: University of TorontoDuring the Romantic period, when a constant stream of distan...
In this article I consider Mary Shelley's use of figuration, examining its characteristic forms. In ...
The subject of this article is the landscape of the mind. At the turn of the eighteenth and nineteen...