Book contents
- Frontmatter
- CONTENTS
- Acknowledgements
- List of Figures
- List of Contributors
- Introduction: Enlightenment and Revolution: A British Problematic
- Part I Constituencies
- Part II The Geography of Utterance
- 6 Serial Literature and Radical Poetry in Wales at the End of the Eighteenth Century
- 7 Popular Song, Readers and Language: Printed Anthologies in Irish and Scottish Gaelic, 1780–1820
- 8 Broadside Literature and Popular Political Opinion in Munster, 1800–1820
- 9 Radical Poetry and the Literary Magazine: Stalking Leigh Hunt in the Republic of Letters
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Index
9 - Radical Poetry and the Literary Magazine: Stalking Leigh Hunt in the Republic of Letters
from Part II - The Geography of Utterance
- Frontmatter
- CONTENTS
- Acknowledgements
- List of Figures
- List of Contributors
- Introduction: Enlightenment and Revolution: A British Problematic
- Part I Constituencies
- Part II The Geography of Utterance
- 6 Serial Literature and Radical Poetry in Wales at the End of the Eighteenth Century
- 7 Popular Song, Readers and Language: Printed Anthologies in Irish and Scottish Gaelic, 1780–1820
- 8 Broadside Literature and Popular Political Opinion in Munster, 1800–1820
- 9 Radical Poetry and the Literary Magazine: Stalking Leigh Hunt in the Republic of Letters
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
In his landmark study Literary Magazines and British Romanticism, Mark Parker convincingly argues that the literary magazine became the ‘preeminent literary form’ of the 1820s and 1830s, and that the study of literary magazines is especially important to the study of the literature of the period because of the way in which each individual magazine projected what he calls ‘a different version of Romanticism’, thus further complicating what is already a problematic and highly contested term. A particularly important part of his argument is that during the 1820s, literary magazines assumed an increasingly apolitical stance in their treatment of literature, the most notable example being the New Monthly, which is described by Parker as ‘a timid, socially ambiguous exploration of domestic comfort and private feeling’. However, elsewhere in his study Parker identifies two literary magazines which alternate between political discussion and literary criticism, namely the London Magazine, and Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine. If viewed in those terms, these publications appear to highlight a transition towards less overt political discussions within the literary magazine by the 1820s. However, Blackwood's treatment of Leigh Hunt, when considered in detail, throws new light upon the extent to which Blackwood's was in fact prepared to enter into an often spirited discussion of politics, and highlights the profound impact which these political impulses had upon the magazine's reception of poetry.
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- Information
- Cultures of Radicalism in Britain and Ireland , pp. 159 - 168Publisher: Pickering & ChattoFirst published in: 2014