At the beginning of the nineteenth century, the literary lecture
arrived on London's cultural scene as an influential critical medium
and popular social event. It flourished for two decades in the hands
of the period's most prominent lecturers: Samuel Taylor Coleridge,
John Thelwall, Thomas Campbell, and William Hazlitt. Lecturers aimed
to shape auditors' reading habits, burnish their own professional
profiles, and establish a literary canon. Auditors wielded their own
considerable influence, since their sustained approbation was
necessary to a lecturer's success, and independent series could
collapse midway if attendance waned. Two chapters are therefore
devoted to the auditors, whose creative responses to what they heard
often constituted cultural works in their own right. Auditors wrote
poems and letters about lecture performances, acted as patrons to
lecturers, and hosted dinners and conversation parties that followed
these events. Prominent auditors included John Keats, Mary Russell
Mitford, Henry Crabb Robinson, Catherine Maria Fanshawe, and Lady
Charlotte Bury. The Romantic public literary lecture is a fascinating
cultural phenomenon in its own right, but understanding the medium has
significant implications for some of the period's most important
literary criticism, such as Coleridge's readings of Shakespeare and
Hazlitt's Lectures on the English Poets (1818). The book's two main
aims are to chart the emergence of the literary lecture as a popular
medium and to develop a critical approach to these events by drawing
on an interdisciplinary discussion about how to treat historical
speaking performances.
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780192569561
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter