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Literary–Cultural Narratives and European Contexts, 1762–1814 Literary–Cultural Narratives and European Contexts, 1762–1814
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Walter Scott and the European Cultural Continuum Walter Scott and the European Cultural Continuum
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Hazlitt and the European Contours of English Culture Hazlitt and the European Contours of English Culture
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De Quincey and European Bildung De Quincey and European Bildung
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Notes Notes
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Further Reading Further Reading
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3 Europe
Get accessDiego Saglia is Professor of English Literature at the University of Parma (Italy). His research focuses on Romantic-period literature and culture, exploring connections between the British and other European traditions, Orientalism, Gothic, national identity, gender, drama and theatre, objects and material culture. He is a member of the advisory committee of the Byron Museum in Ravenna, and the Italian Interuniversity Centre for the Study of Romanticism (CISR). He has recently co-edited Byron and Italy (with Alan Rawes, 2017) and Spain and British Romanticism 1800–1840 (with Ian Haywood, 2018). His latest publication is the monograph European Literatures in Britain, 1815–1832: Romantic Translations (2019).
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Published:22 May 2024
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Abstract
As ideas of cultural identity in Britain solidified between the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, Romantic-period narratives of the nation’s literary heritage confronted and accommodated a long history of contacts and exchanges with neighbouring traditions. This chapter addresses this process of cultural self-construction by exploring how Romantic nonfiction prose engaged with Europe as a literary–cultural continuum and assessed the place of England and Britain within it. Exploring selected literary works—including Thomas Warton’s History of English Poetry (1774–1781), John Dunlop’s History of Fiction (1814), Walter Scott’s essays on chivalry, drama, and romance for the Encyclopaedia Britannica (1818–1824), William Hazlitt’s lectures and critical essays (1817–1820), and Thomas De Quincey’s ‘Letters to a Young Man Whose Education Has Been Neglected’ (1823)—this chapter reappraises how nonfiction prose contributed to the emergence of a Romantic discourse on the nation’s literary–cultural history and identity, its current condition, and possible developments within the encompassing context of Europe.
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