Romantic Globalism

British Literature and Modern World Order, 1750–1830

Evan Gottlieb

 


4/8/2014
Literary criticism/European/English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh
214 pp. 6x9



$59.95 cloth 978-0-8142-1254-7
Add cloth to shopping cart

$24.95 paper 978-0-8142-5285-7
Add paper to shopping cart

$14.95 CD 978-0-8142-9357-7
Add CD to shopping cart

Shopping Cart Instructions
Review/Change Shopping Cart & Check-out

Table of Contents


Explore More
The author recommends the following links:

Evan Gottlieb’s contributions to The Huffington Post

Romantic Circles

“The History of Globalization,” from YaleGlobal Online

The Walter Scott Digital Archive

 

Romantic Globalism is well-written, intelligently argued, deeply knowledgeable about the fields it covers, and timely. We need a book like this in the field, and Evan Gottlieb has given us a very good one.” —Anthony Jarrells, University of South Carolina

Romantic Globalism: British Literature and Modern World Order, 1750–1830 explores how British literature of the late eighteenth century and Romantic era both reflects and inflects the increasingly global world in which it was produced and consumed. Building on recent work in globalization studies, cosmopolitanism, and critical theory, Evan Gottlieb investigates the ways in which, following the economic and historiographical writings of the Scottish Enlightenment, a number of influential Romantic-era authors began representing, mediating, and even critiquing their experiences of globalization in poetry, fiction, and drama.

Although modern media tend to represent globalization as an essentially contemporary phenomenon, many scholars now agree that its fundamental dynamics—especially its characteristic compression of spatial and temporal differences—have been present for several centuries. Moreover, the last decades of the eighteenth century and the first of the nineteenth century saw the convergence of a number of world-changing socio-political developments in the Western world. Romantic Globalism is significant because it is the first extended scholarly study that brings together these lines of inquiry. In so doing, Romantic Globalism not only charts a new course of study for British Romanticism but also suggests how the Romantics’ visions of globality might still be valuable to us today.

Evan Gottlieb is associate professor of English at Oregon State University.