Thomas De Quincey exploits his rivalry with Samuel Taylor Coleridge to structure many of the key features of his most famous work, ‘Confessions of an English Opium-Eater’ (1821). De Quincey's idolization of Coleridge began early and survived the anger and disappointment he felt after the collapse of their friendship and his discovery of Coleridge's intellectual duplicity. In ‘Confessions’, De Quincey's accounts of himself as a scholar of Greek literature, Ricardian economics, and Kantean philosophy are all galvanized by his knowledge that Coleridge too has worked in these areas. As opium addicts, De Quincey's experience of the drug overlaps with Coleridge's in a number of ways, while De Quincey differs from Coleridge – at least on the surfa...
Several critics have sought to identify the central features in the multiplicity of Thomas De Quinc...
Studying the works of De Quincey necessarily leads to three concepts almost impossible to define: au...
The suddenly undecidable moment when one is both inside and outside oneself is De Quincey's recurrin...
In the introductory part of the Confessions of an English Opium-Eater (1821), De Quincey makes a dis...
'Life for De Quincey was either angels ascending on vaults of cloud or vagrants shivering on the cit...
v. 1. Confessions of an English opium-eater -- v. 2. Recollections of the lakes and the lake poets -...
Four eminent English authors were addicted to opium. Each author spent a considerable part of his li...
First pub. without Kant in his Miscellaneous essays and Problem of a perpetual peace (v. 12), Logic ...
What light can De Quincey\u27s Confessions of an English Opium-Eater (1821) shed on its author\u27s ...
Vol.1. originally published in 1878; reprinted 1885.Each volume has special t.-p.v.1. Confessions of...
On spine: Author's edition.Each vol. except v.1 has special t.-p. only.v.1. Confessions of an Englis...
The thesis examines Thomas De Quincey’s opium use as a product of social strain. De Quincey’s collec...
This essay examines De Quincey’s representation of opium ‘addiction’ in the cross-cultural context o...
This essay situates Thomas De Quincey's essay 'On the Opium and the China Question' published in Bla...
Coleridge\u27s usual use of opium was through laudanum, a mixture of opium and alcohol. This thesis...
Several critics have sought to identify the central features in the multiplicity of Thomas De Quinc...
Studying the works of De Quincey necessarily leads to three concepts almost impossible to define: au...
The suddenly undecidable moment when one is both inside and outside oneself is De Quincey's recurrin...
In the introductory part of the Confessions of an English Opium-Eater (1821), De Quincey makes a dis...
'Life for De Quincey was either angels ascending on vaults of cloud or vagrants shivering on the cit...
v. 1. Confessions of an English opium-eater -- v. 2. Recollections of the lakes and the lake poets -...
Four eminent English authors were addicted to opium. Each author spent a considerable part of his li...
First pub. without Kant in his Miscellaneous essays and Problem of a perpetual peace (v. 12), Logic ...
What light can De Quincey\u27s Confessions of an English Opium-Eater (1821) shed on its author\u27s ...
Vol.1. originally published in 1878; reprinted 1885.Each volume has special t.-p.v.1. Confessions of...
On spine: Author's edition.Each vol. except v.1 has special t.-p. only.v.1. Confessions of an Englis...
The thesis examines Thomas De Quincey’s opium use as a product of social strain. De Quincey’s collec...
This essay examines De Quincey’s representation of opium ‘addiction’ in the cross-cultural context o...
This essay situates Thomas De Quincey's essay 'On the Opium and the China Question' published in Bla...
Coleridge\u27s usual use of opium was through laudanum, a mixture of opium and alcohol. This thesis...
Several critics have sought to identify the central features in the multiplicity of Thomas De Quinc...
Studying the works of De Quincey necessarily leads to three concepts almost impossible to define: au...
The suddenly undecidable moment when one is both inside and outside oneself is De Quincey's recurrin...