Exploring an Anglo-German network of thought and writing in Britain between 1700 and 1790, this volume offers a new approach to eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century literature and culture. It explores a set of radical figures and institutions that are exorbitant, with particular focus on William Blake and Johann Georg Hamann.
Exploring an Anglo-German network of thought and writing in Britain between 1700 and 1790, this volume offers a new approach to eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century literature and culture. It explores a set of radical figures and institutions that are exorbitant, with particular focus on William Blake and Johann Georg Hamann.
Alexander Regier is Associate Professor of English at Rice University and editor of the scholarly journal SEL Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 . He is the author of Fracture and Fragmentation in British Romanticism (Cambridge University Press, 2010), the co-editor of Wordsworth's Poetic Theory: Knowledge, Language, Experience (Palgrave, 2010), and has edited special journal issues on "Mobilities" and "Genealogies". Dr Regier has published widely on William Blake, Johann Georg Hamann, William Wordsworth, Walter Benjamin, ruins, contemporary poetry, and the aesthetics of sport. He has been the recipient of numerous awards, including an Alexander von Humboldt Fellowship for Experienced Researchers.
Inhaltsangabe
* Introduction: Troubling Enlightenment * 1: Unexpected Anglo-German Connections in Pre-1790s Britain * 2: Blake and Hamann: Exorbitants * 3: Crossing Channels: Fuseli, Hamann, and Lavater * 4: Blake and Hamann: Poetry as Mother Tongue and the Fight against Instrumental Reason * 5: The Polyglot Moravians in Eighteenth-Century London * 6: A Critique of Habit: Blake and Hamann on Religion, Matrimony, and Pedagogy * 7: Hybrid Hymns: Anglo-German Voices in Blake's Songs * 8: Every Letter Has a Body: Blake and Hamann on the Sexuality of Language
* Introduction: Troubling Enlightenment * 1: Unexpected Anglo-German Connections in Pre-1790s Britain * 2: Blake and Hamann: Exorbitants * 3: Crossing Channels: Fuseli, Hamann, and Lavater * 4: Blake and Hamann: Poetry as Mother Tongue and the Fight against Instrumental Reason * 5: The Polyglot Moravians in Eighteenth-Century London * 6: A Critique of Habit: Blake and Hamann on Religion, Matrimony, and Pedagogy * 7: Hybrid Hymns: Anglo-German Voices in Blake's Songs * 8: Every Letter Has a Body: Blake and Hamann on the Sexuality of Language
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