The Romantic period was witness to an extraordinary take-off in the production and consumption of periodical writing. Most critics of periodicals have been interested in them insofar as they offer a mode of cultural expression distinct from the literary canon, one more ready to address political issues directly. The writing in the government-sponsored Quarterly Review seems to offer itself as strictly political, antipathetic to literary expression. But the division between literature and its context in this period was not so secure. This article examines a print debate carried on between Robert Southey at the Quarterly and Leigh Hunt and William Hazlitt at The Examiner. This debate had the paradoxical effect of bringing these political oppo...
A GREATER CONTRAST could hardly exist than between the two periodicals that lie at this moment besid...
The above presented article considers literary periodicals of the romantic period. The peculiarities...
This article examines Robert Southey’s interactions with both politics and politicians in the year 1...
Long considered the literary representatives of the public sphere, British periodicals underwent sig...
Blackwood’s Magazine effected, as the magazine itself put it, “a new era in periodical literature” u...
The period between the Glorious Revolution and the end of Queen Anne's reign was a time when politic...
ROMANTIC PERIODICALS AND THE INVENTION OF THE LIVING AUTHOR Christine Marie Woody Michael Gamer This...
This article adds to critics' growing interest in Romantic periodicals by focusing on weekly periodi...
Print Politics was the first literary study of the culture of the popular radical movement for parli...
Conservative culture in the Romantic period should not be understood merely as an effort to preserve...
When John Scott and William Christie, representatives of the London Magazine and Blackwood’s Edinbur...
Prose, of varying length, tone, purpose, and style, made up the vast majority of periodical content ...
Rise of the Great Political Reviews in England. The opening of the nineteenth century marked a new e...
Scholarly investigations of the politics of Romanticism and the role of emotion in Romanticism have ...
This chapter aims to evaluate the importance of book reviews in the radical press, by discussing the...
A GREATER CONTRAST could hardly exist than between the two periodicals that lie at this moment besid...
The above presented article considers literary periodicals of the romantic period. The peculiarities...
This article examines Robert Southey’s interactions with both politics and politicians in the year 1...
Long considered the literary representatives of the public sphere, British periodicals underwent sig...
Blackwood’s Magazine effected, as the magazine itself put it, “a new era in periodical literature” u...
The period between the Glorious Revolution and the end of Queen Anne's reign was a time when politic...
ROMANTIC PERIODICALS AND THE INVENTION OF THE LIVING AUTHOR Christine Marie Woody Michael Gamer This...
This article adds to critics' growing interest in Romantic periodicals by focusing on weekly periodi...
Print Politics was the first literary study of the culture of the popular radical movement for parli...
Conservative culture in the Romantic period should not be understood merely as an effort to preserve...
When John Scott and William Christie, representatives of the London Magazine and Blackwood’s Edinbur...
Prose, of varying length, tone, purpose, and style, made up the vast majority of periodical content ...
Rise of the Great Political Reviews in England. The opening of the nineteenth century marked a new e...
Scholarly investigations of the politics of Romanticism and the role of emotion in Romanticism have ...
This chapter aims to evaluate the importance of book reviews in the radical press, by discussing the...
A GREATER CONTRAST could hardly exist than between the two periodicals that lie at this moment besid...
The above presented article considers literary periodicals of the romantic period. The peculiarities...
This article examines Robert Southey’s interactions with both politics and politicians in the year 1...