That study attempted to elaborate the problematic of [Leigh Hunt's] position within the London literary and political scene between the years 1805 and1828, the contributions he made to British literature and journalism, and his public standing at the end of the romantic period. Since Hunt's life is obviously too complex to be rendered fully in any single study, the idea was not to attempt an exhaustive history, but rather to present a starting point for further inquiry into Hunt's career as a writer and public figure under the reign of Queen Victoria. [...
This book maps the history of literary celebrity from the early nineteenth century to the present, p...
To Victorians, the Marquis of Queensberry was a well-known aristocrat. As the father of Lord Alfred ...
Elizabeth Kent has been considered a rather minor figure in the Leigh Hunt circle. However, this exa...
That study attempted to elaborate the problematic of [Leigh Hunt's] position within the London liter...
Leigh Hunt's authorship of "A legend of Florence" (1840) — a drama inspired by the rich cultural, in...
What follows is hut the first rough draft, in parts very incomplete, of a critical and descriptive ...
Leigh Hunt (1784-1859) was an English Romantic-era literary critic, journalist, essayist, and poet. ...
1816 was arguably the most significant year in Leigh Hunt's career as a Romantic poet. After a two-y...
First, who is Violent Hunt? She was a prominent Edwardian novelist and journalist whose fictional he...
This essay examines Leigh Hunt’s three major autobiographical texts: Lord Byron and Some of His Cont...
Critical overview of Hunt's output as a journalist in the context of the exploration of global liter...
nial family, the father being descended from generations of Barbados clergymen and the mother being ...
In an effort to historicize celebrity as a phenomenon that pre-dates film, celebrity studies scholar...
The years 1801 to 1808 saw the emergence of Leigh Hunt as a public figure on the London literary sce...
I. National biography. The evolution of editors. John Byrom. Johnsoniana. Gibbon's autobiography...
This book maps the history of literary celebrity from the early nineteenth century to the present, p...
To Victorians, the Marquis of Queensberry was a well-known aristocrat. As the father of Lord Alfred ...
Elizabeth Kent has been considered a rather minor figure in the Leigh Hunt circle. However, this exa...
That study attempted to elaborate the problematic of [Leigh Hunt's] position within the London liter...
Leigh Hunt's authorship of "A legend of Florence" (1840) — a drama inspired by the rich cultural, in...
What follows is hut the first rough draft, in parts very incomplete, of a critical and descriptive ...
Leigh Hunt (1784-1859) was an English Romantic-era literary critic, journalist, essayist, and poet. ...
1816 was arguably the most significant year in Leigh Hunt's career as a Romantic poet. After a two-y...
First, who is Violent Hunt? She was a prominent Edwardian novelist and journalist whose fictional he...
This essay examines Leigh Hunt’s three major autobiographical texts: Lord Byron and Some of His Cont...
Critical overview of Hunt's output as a journalist in the context of the exploration of global liter...
nial family, the father being descended from generations of Barbados clergymen and the mother being ...
In an effort to historicize celebrity as a phenomenon that pre-dates film, celebrity studies scholar...
The years 1801 to 1808 saw the emergence of Leigh Hunt as a public figure on the London literary sce...
I. National biography. The evolution of editors. John Byrom. Johnsoniana. Gibbon's autobiography...
This book maps the history of literary celebrity from the early nineteenth century to the present, p...
To Victorians, the Marquis of Queensberry was a well-known aristocrat. As the father of Lord Alfred ...
Elizabeth Kent has been considered a rather minor figure in the Leigh Hunt circle. However, this exa...