Victorian Poetry, Europe, and the Challenge of Cosmopolitanism
The scope and complexity of the encounter with Europe in Victorian poetry remains largely underappreciated despite recent critical attention to the genre's global and transnational contexts. Providing much more than colorful settings or a convenient place of self-exile from England, Europe-as d...
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Zusammenfassung: | The scope and complexity of the encounter with Europe in
Victorian poetry remains largely underappreciated despite recent
critical attention to the genre's global and transnational
contexts. Providing much more than colorful settings or a
convenient place of self-exile from England, Europe-as destination
and idea-formed the basis of a dynamic, evolving form of critical
cosmopolitanism much in tune with attempts to theorize the concept
today. Christopher M. Keirstead's Victorian Poetry, Europe, and
the Challenge of Cosmopolitanism synthesizes the complex
relationship between several notable Victorian poets, including
Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Robert Browning, Matthew Arnold, and A.
C. Swinburne, and their respective attitudes toward Europe as a
cosmopolitan whole. Examining their international relationships and
experiences, the monograph explores the ways in which these poets
worked to reconcile their emotional and intellectual affinity for
world citizenship with their British identity.
This book reveals how a diverse range of poets sought to resituate
the form within a broad European political and cultural frame of
reference. At the same time, a strong awareness of the difficulties
of sustaining genuine, transformative contact between cultures
permeates the work of these poets. The challenge of cosmopolitanism
thus consisted not only in the threat it posed to entrenched
assumptions about what was normative, natural, or universal but
also in the challenge cosmopolitanism posed to itself. |
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DOI: | 10.2307/j.ctv16qjzk1 |