The Blind and Blindness in Literature of the Romantic Period
The Blind and Blindness in Literature of the Romantic Period
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Abstract
This book examines the philosophical and literary background to representations of blindness and the blind in the Romantic period. In detailed studies of literary works the author shows how the topic is central to an understanding of British and Irish Romantic literature. While he considers the influence of Milton and the ‘Ossian’ poems, as well as of philosophers including Locke, Diderot, Berkeley and Thomas Reid, much of the book is taken up with new readings of writers of the period. These include canonical authors such as Blake, Wordsworth, Scott, Byron, Keats and Percy and Mary Shelley, as well as less-well-known writers such as Charlotte Brooke and Ann Batten Cristall. There is also a chapter on the popular genre of improving tales for children by writers such as Barbara Hofland and Mary Sherwood. The author finds that, despite the nostalgia for a bardic age of inward vision, the chief emphasis in the period is on the compensations of enhanced sensitivity to music and words. This compensation becomes associated with the loss and gain involved in the modernity of a post-bardic age. Representations of blindness and the blind are found to elucidate a tension at the heart of the Romantic period, between the desire for immediacy of vision on the one hand and, on the other, the historical self-consciousness that always attends it.
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Front Matter
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1
The Enigma of the Blind
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2
The Celtic Bard in Ireland and Britain: Blindness and Second Sight
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3
Blake: Removing the Curse by Printing for the Blind
- 4 Edifying Tales
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5
Wordsworth's Transitions
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6
Coleridge, Keats and a Full Perception
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7
Byron and Shelley: The Blindness of Reason
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8
Mary Shelley: Blind Fathers and the Magnetic Globe: Frankenstein with Valperga and The Last Man
- 9 Conclusion
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End Matter
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