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Capa de British romanticism and continental influences

a novel ·

British romanticism and continental influences

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"During the 1790s and 1800s cultural critics became convinced that Britain was being 'flooded', 'deluged' or 'inundated' by pernicious literary translations imported from the European Continent. Evoking a rhetoric of paranoid Europhobia, British wartime commentators routinely stigmatized popular foreign writers …

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  • ● history, literary fiction

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"During the 1790s and 1800s cultural critics became convinced that Britain was being 'flooded', 'deluged' or 'inundated' by pernicious literary translations imported from the European Continent. Evoking a rhetoric of paranoid Europhobia, British wartime commentators routinely stigmatized popular foreign writers like Burger, Schiller, Kotzebue and Rousseau not merely as political dissenters, but as enemies of all civilization and ultimately as Satanic rebels against God." "British Romanticism and Continental Influences discusses some first-generation Romantic writers' ambivalent responses to the scandalous products of European pre-romanticism. Celebrated poets and novelists such as Wordsworth, Coleridge, Scott and Austen vocally denounced Continental texts and writers for deliberately demoralizing vulnerable British readers. Yet, paradoxically, the same prominent figures (as well as a host of lesser names) also flirted dangerously with the foreign, borrowing paraphernalia from those non-British writers whose influence they claimed to counteract. This book centres on British Romantic writers' complex transactions with those outlandish texts which both attracted and repulsed them, and which they both imitated and revised. Confronted with the perceived abominations of illicit and non-conformist writing, Mortensen argues, the Romantic writers publicly distanced themselves from European sensationalism, even as they assimilated its conventions in their own discourse."--Jacket.

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Margaret's verdict

""During the 1790s and 1800s cultural critics became convinced that Britain was being 'flooded', 'deluged' or 'inundated' by pernicious literary translations imported from the European Continent. Evoking a rhetoric of …"

— Margaret

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