Book contents
- The Cambridge History of European Romantic Literature
- The Cambridge History of European Romantic Literature
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Note on the Text
- Chronology
- Introduction
- Part I Romantic Genealogies (1750–1790)
- Part II Revolution to Restoration (1790–1815)
- Part III Restoration to Revolution (1815–1850)
- 14 The ‘Restoration’ of the Restoration
- 15 Late Romanticism and Print Culture
- 16 Global Romanticisms
- 17 No Longer at Ease
- 18 Literatures of the North
- 19 Russian Empire and the Territories of Romanticism
- Further Reading
- Index
16 - Global Romanticisms
from Part III - Restoration to Revolution (1815–1850)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 January 2024
- The Cambridge History of European Romantic Literature
- The Cambridge History of European Romantic Literature
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Note on the Text
- Chronology
- Introduction
- Part I Romantic Genealogies (1750–1790)
- Part II Revolution to Restoration (1790–1815)
- Part III Restoration to Revolution (1815–1850)
- 14 The ‘Restoration’ of the Restoration
- 15 Late Romanticism and Print Culture
- 16 Global Romanticisms
- 17 No Longer at Ease
- 18 Literatures of the North
- 19 Russian Empire and the Territories of Romanticism
- Further Reading
- Index
Summary
Chapter Sixteen argues that late-Romantic literature also reflects Europe’s new global consciousness, a product of the modern nation-state rather than of cosmopolitanism. What Goethe referred to as Weltliteratur is updated here as global literature. The chapter first defends the historical and theoretical application of globalisation to the Romantic context, linking it with the development of nationalism and imperialism, and in particular the increasingly transnational book trade. It then analyses this ‘global imaginary’ from a British perspective in Scott’s The Field of Waterloo, Mary Shelley’s The Last Man and Felicia Hemans’ Records of Woman. These texts show among other things how Britons reacted to their nation’s new global power and interconnectedness, which made them feel more dependent and vulnerable, but also contributed to a sense of ‘global sociality’. The last section briefly looks at how other European literatures likewise reflected their national as well as imperial anxieties in the wake of Napoleon, examining Scott’s influence abroad in a novel by de la Motte Fouqué.
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- The Cambridge History of European Romantic Literature , pp. 487 - 515Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023