If the centuries preceding and following it are known for their revolutionary character (the seventeenth century for its regicide and the Romantic period for the French Revolution), then the eighteenth century in Britain has seemed in many accounts to be an age of progress rather than upheaval. As a period of refined sensibility and rapid economic growth, the British eighteenth century appears to be marked by an insistence on social stability and thus to have little room for melancholy, the sadness that does not end. In “Melancholy’s Wake,” however, I contend that the politically revolutionary spirit that seems otherwise missing in the eighteenth century is located instead in the melancholic language of loss deployed by the graveyard poems ...
The Elizabethan interest in melancholy as a physio-psychological condition is well-documented. Mela...
The Elizabethan interest in melancholy as a physio-psychological condition is well-documented. Mela...
This essay revisits the involved relationship between the senses, sense and sensibility in four eigh...
The modern definition of melancholy is an “ill-temper, sullenness, brooding, anger” (Oxford English ...
The modern definition of melancholy is an “ill-temper, sullenness, brooding, anger” (Oxford English ...
The modern definition of melancholy is an “ill-temper, sullenness, brooding, anger” (Oxford English ...
This thesis examines the development of the novel in the eighteenth century in relation to changing ...
The middling sort was often thought to be immune or ill-suited to tragedy, its modest, commercial wa...
This thesis questions the assumption that eighteenth-century sensibility is inherently social in ori...
At the end of the eighteenth century, England found itself plunged into crisis. Following the best p...
Historians and literary scholars tend to agree that British intellectual culture underwent a fundame...
This book arises out of a major research project, funded by the Leverhulme Trust, on depression in t...
This book arises out of a major research project, funded by the Leverhulme Trust, on depression in t...
This book arises out of a major research project, funded by the Leverhulme Trust, on depression in t...
This thesis addresses the possible sources of melancholy evident in Eighteenth Century writing. Poss...
The Elizabethan interest in melancholy as a physio-psychological condition is well-documented. Mela...
The Elizabethan interest in melancholy as a physio-psychological condition is well-documented. Mela...
This essay revisits the involved relationship between the senses, sense and sensibility in four eigh...
The modern definition of melancholy is an “ill-temper, sullenness, brooding, anger” (Oxford English ...
The modern definition of melancholy is an “ill-temper, sullenness, brooding, anger” (Oxford English ...
The modern definition of melancholy is an “ill-temper, sullenness, brooding, anger” (Oxford English ...
This thesis examines the development of the novel in the eighteenth century in relation to changing ...
The middling sort was often thought to be immune or ill-suited to tragedy, its modest, commercial wa...
This thesis questions the assumption that eighteenth-century sensibility is inherently social in ori...
At the end of the eighteenth century, England found itself plunged into crisis. Following the best p...
Historians and literary scholars tend to agree that British intellectual culture underwent a fundame...
This book arises out of a major research project, funded by the Leverhulme Trust, on depression in t...
This book arises out of a major research project, funded by the Leverhulme Trust, on depression in t...
This book arises out of a major research project, funded by the Leverhulme Trust, on depression in t...
This thesis addresses the possible sources of melancholy evident in Eighteenth Century writing. Poss...
The Elizabethan interest in melancholy as a physio-psychological condition is well-documented. Mela...
The Elizabethan interest in melancholy as a physio-psychological condition is well-documented. Mela...
This essay revisits the involved relationship between the senses, sense and sensibility in four eigh...