Landscape, Liberty and Authority
Eighteenth-century landscape description formed part of a larger debate over the nature of liberty and authority which was vital to a Britain newly defining its nationhood in a period of growing imperial power and rapid economic change. Tim Fulford examines landscape description in the writings of Thomson, Cowper, Johnson, Gilpin, Repton, Wordsworth, Coleridge and others, revealing tensions that arose as writers struggled for authority over the public sphere and sought to redefine the nature of that authority. In his investigation of poetry and political and aesthetic writing, Dr Fulford throws light on the legacy of Commonwealth and Country-party ideas of liberty. Also discussed are the significance of the Miltonic sublime, the politics of the picturesque and the post-colonial encounter of the Scottish tour. Dr Fulford goes on to show how the early radicalism and later conservatism of Wordsworth and Coleridge were shaped, in part, by eighteenth-century literary political and literary authorities. His study offers an understanding of literary and political influence that cuts across conventional periodization, finding new links between the early eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
- Reveals political and literary context of landscape description in a wide range of writers of eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries
- Makes links between eighteenth- and nineteenth-century political and literary thought
- Readings of canonical authors in wider context
Reviews & endorsements
"No brief interpretation can do justice to Fulford's exceptionally rich and nuanced argument. His discussion of Wordsworth and Coleridge as continuators and radical revisers of their eighteenth-century predecessors are illuminating; the chapter on Wordsworth, the longest in the book, offers a convincing interpretation of Wordsworth's politico-poetical career. Throughout, Fulford's readings of texts, both in prose and verse, are subtle and generally compelling." John D. Baird, European Romantic Review
"Fulford's achievement here should be applauded, and his historically informed analysis should generate much further discussion about the relationship between landscape poetry, politics, and history in the near future." Romantic Circles Reviews
Product details
June 1996Hardback
9780521554558
270 pages
236 × 159 × 20 mm
0.51kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1. Thomson and Cowper: the 'stubborn country tam'd'?
- 2. Johnson: the usurpations of virility
- 3. Unreliable authorities? Squires, tourists and the picturesque
- 4. Wordsworth: the politics of landscape
- 5. Coleridge: fields of liberty
- Index.