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Poetics of Character: Transatlantic Encounters 1700–1900: 102 (Cambridge Studies in Romanticism, Series Number 102)

Poetics of Character: Transatlantic Encounters 1700–1900: 102 (Cambridge Studies in Romanticism, Series Number 102)

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Susan Manning
Cambridge University Press, 11/14/2013
EAN 9781107042407, ISBN10: 1107042402

Hardcover, 336 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.9 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English

This study of character in a comparative context presents a new approach to transatlantic literary history. Rereading Romanticism across national, generic and chronological boundaries, and through close textual comparisons, it offers exciting possibilities for rediscovering how literature engages and persuades readers of the reality of character. Historically grounded in the eighteenth-century philosophical, political and cultural conditions that generated nation-based literary history, it reveals alternative narratives to those of origin and succession, influence and reception. It also reintroduces rhetoric and poetics as ways of addressing questions about uniqueness and representativeness in character creation, epistemological issues of identity and impersonation, and the generation of literary value. Drawing comparisons between works from Alexander Pope and Cotton Mather through Robert Burns, Jane Austen, John Keats, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Edgar Allan Poe, R. W. Emerson, Margaret Fuller and Herman Melville, to George Eliot and Henry James, Susan Manning reveals surprising metaphorical, metonymic and performative connections.

Prologue
Part I. Transatlantic Literary History and the Poetics of Character
1. 'Is analogy argument?'
Part II. Reading Character in Comparison
2. Transatlantic contagion and the seductions of allegory
3. Characterless women
4. Characters and representatives
5. Literary friendship and transatlantic correspondences
6. Subjects and objects
'always joined, never settled'
7. Historical characters
virtue ethics and the limits of romantic biography
8. Poetics of character.