John Bugg 
Five Long Winters [EPUB ebook] 
The Trials of British Romanticism

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This book argues that the British government’s repression of the 1790s rivals the French Revolution as the most important historical event for our understanding the development of Romantic literature. Romanticism has long been associated with both rebellion and escapism, and much Romantic historicism traces an arc from the outburst of democratic energy in British culture triggered by the French Revolution to a dwindling of enthusiasm later in the 1790s, when things in France turned violent. Writers such as Wordsworth and Coleridge can then be seen as ‘apostates’ who turned from radical politics to a poetics of transcendence. Bugg argues instead for a poetics of silence, and his book is set against the backdrop of the so-called Gagging Acts and other legislation of William Pitt, which in literature manifests itself stylistically as silence, stuttering, fragmentation, and encoding. Mining archives of unpublished documents, including manuscripts, diaries, and letters, where authors were more candid, as well as rereading the work of both major and minor figures, a number of whom were subject to prison sentences, Five Long Winters offers a new way of approaching the literature of the Romantic era.

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About the author

John Bugg is Assistant Professor of English at Fordham University in New York.

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Language English ● Format EPUB ● Pages 264 ● ISBN 9780804787307 ● File size 17.4 MB ● Publisher Stanford University Press ● Published 2013 ● Edition 1 ● Downloadable 24 months ● Currency EUR ● ID 5208393 ● Copy protection Adobe DRM
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