Robert Southey and romantic apostasy
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About This Book
"Like William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Robert Southey has been remembered not just as a romantic poet but also as a political apostate. In the 1790s he was fired by enthusiasm for the French Revolution, and was known as a radical and a republican. By the 1820s, however, he was not only the poet laureate, but a fierce conservative who opposed the reform of Church and State. Yet at the same time his reactionary politics were mixed with anxiety about the effects of industrialisation and the growth of poverty, leading some commentators to view him as a prophet of socialism and collectivism." "This book charts the development of Southey's social and political ideas in order to throw light on the problems generated by the concept of 'romantic apostasy'. It draws on his poetry, histories, journalism and letters to show that his intellectual evolution was more compLex than has previously been thought. In so doing it touches on numerous themes: theological politics, national character, the 'social question', providence and history, and questions of race, empire and civilisation, as well as the nature of republicanism and the evolution of conservatism. It is an important contribution towards the wider understanding of the intellectual aftermath of the French Revolution in Britain."--Jacket.
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