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The Romantic crowd : sympathy, controversy and print culture

Title
The Romantic crowd : sympathy, controversy and print culture / Mary Fairclough.
ISBN
9781107031692
1107031699
Publication
Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2013.
Physical Description
ix, 294 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
Summary
"In the long eighteenth century, sympathy was understood not just as an emotional bond, but also as a physiological force, through which disruption in one part of the body produces instantaneous disruption in another. Building on this theory, Romantic writers explored sympathy as a disruptive social phenomenon, which functioned to spread disorder between individuals and even across nations like a 'contagion'. It thus accounted for the instinctive behaviour of people swept up in a crowd. During this era sympathy assumed a controversial political significance, as it came to be associated with both riotous political protest and the diffusion of information through the press. Mary Fairclough reads Edmund Burke, Mary Wollstonecraft, William Godwin, John Thelwall, William Hazlitt and Thomas De Quincey alongside contemporary political, medical and philosophical discourse. Many of their central questions about crowd behaviour still remain to be answered by the modern discourse of collective psychology"-- Provided by publisher.
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
May 15, 2013
Series
Cambridge studies in Romanticism ; 97.
Cambridge studies in Romanticism ; [97]
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 266-287) and index.
Contents
Introduction: collective sympathy
Part I. Sympathetic Communication, 1750-1800: From Moral Philosophy to Revolutionary Crowds: 1. Sympathy and the crowd: eighteenth-century contexts; 2. Sympathetic communication and the French Revolution
Part II. Romantic Afterlives, 1800-1850: Sympathetic Communication, Mass Protest and Print Culture: 3. Sympathy and the press: mass protest and print culture in Regency England; 4. 'The contagious sympathy of popular and patriotic emotions': sympathy and loyalism after Waterloo
Afterword: sympathy and the Romantic crowd.
Citation

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