Magisterarbeit, 2002
123 Seiten, Note: 1,3 (A)
1. Introduction
2. The growth of the reading public
2.1 Size and limitations of the reading public
2.2 Causes for the growth of the reading public
2.2.1 Population growth and urbanization
2.2.2 Education and literacy
2.2.3 Technological progress and the impact of the industrial revolution
2.2.4 Growing interest in political events
2.3 Social varieties of the reading public
3. Romantic poets and the literary marketplace
3.1 The transformation of the publishing business
3.2 Authors and publishers
3.3 The commodification of literature: copyrights and best-sellers
3.3.1 The debates over copyright
3.3.2 Best-sellers
3.4 The institutionalization of literature: The British reviews
3.5 Romantic poets in the literary marketplace
3.5.1 The task of a lifetime: William Wordsworth
3.5.2 Unacknowledged legislators: Percy Bysshe Shelley and John Keats
3.5.2.1 Percy Bysshe Shelley
3.5.2.2 John Keats
3.5.3 Aristocratic best-sellers: George Gordon Lord Byron and Sir Walter Scott
3.5.3.1 George Gordon Lord Byron
3.5.3.2 Sir Walter Scott
4. The poet and his audience: Romantic critical theory in its socio-historical context
4.1. Romantic theories of art and their social context
4.2. Conceptions of poets from the Renaissance to the Augustan Age
4.3. Romantic conceptions of poets and their audiences
4.3.1 William Wordsworth
4.3.1.1 The poet’s social function: “one of us” or poetic genius?
4.3.1.2 Wordsworth’s conception of readers and audiences
4.3.2 Samuel Taylor Coleridge
4.3.2.1 Coleridge’s definitions of the poet
4.3.2.2 Attitudes toward the literary marketplace
4.3.2.3 Configurations of readers: Sciolism and the clerisy
4.3.3 Percy Bysshe Shelley
4.3.3.1 Definitions of the poet
4.3.3.2 Shelley’s conception of audiences
4.3.4 John Keats
4.3.4.1 Attitudes toward the collective reading public
4.3.4.2 The poet and his ideal readers
4.3.5 George Gordon, Lord Byron
4.3.5.1 Definitions of the poet: The aristocratic amateur re-established
4.3.5.2 Byron’s attitudes toward the reading public
5. Conclusion: The Romantic dilemma and beyond
This work examines the relationship between English Romantic poets and their reading audiences, focusing on the "Romantic dilemma"—the conflict between the poets' vision of truth and the demands of a growing, commercialized, and increasingly escapist reading public. It analyzes how poets redefined their positions within a nascent literary marketplace, balancing artistic integrity with the practical need to secure an audience.
The commodification of literature: copyrights and best-sellers
An important corollary of the literary marketplace is the valuation of literary copyright. Copyright follows the logic of the print market by commodifying writers’ and publishers’ share of literature in quantifiable sums of money. Since Elizabethan times it had been common practice to regard copyright as the perpetual property of the bookseller. The first proper Copyright Act of 1709 limited copyright to 21 years (28 when the author was still alive), excluding works already under copyright. While a 1769 act reinstated the booksellers’ right to perpetual copyright, this concept was effectively terminated in the case of Donaldson vs. Beckett in 1774. As a consequence a number of cheap reprint series such as Bell’s Poets of Great Britain enjoyed huge popular success and proved that the market for literature was greater than supply had previously suggested. In 1814 the period of copyright was extended from fourteen to twenty-eight years and further extended to forty-two years in 1842, or, if the author lived longer than this, to the duration of his or her life plus seven years.
The copyright question was hotly debated during the Romantic period. Arguing for the rights of authors, D’Israeli found that they are heirs to fortunes, but by a strange singularity they are disinherited at their birth; for, on the publication of their works, they cease to be their own property. […] The natural rights and properties of AUTHORS not having been sufficiently protected, they are defrauded, not indeed of their fame, though they may not always live to witness it, but of their uninterrupted profits, which might save them from their frequent degradation in society.
1. Introduction: Introduces the "Romantic dilemma" and outlines the methodological approach, emphasizing the importance of socio-historical context in understanding Romantic poetic theories.
2. The growth of the reading public: Explores factors contributing to the expansion of the readership, including population growth, urbanization, and technological changes in the book trade.
3. Romantic poets and the literary marketplace: Examines the transformation of the publishing industry and the professionalization of authors, analyzing the specific market experiences of major Romantic poets.
4. The poet and his audience: Romantic critical theory in its socio-historical context: Analyzes the critical theories of major Romantic poets, contrasting their views on poetry and readers against their material realities.
5. Conclusion: The Romantic dilemma and beyond: Synthesizes the findings, arguing that the Romantic dilemma was fundamentally insoluble without sacrificing the original Romantic sense of mission.
Romanticism, Romantic poets, literary marketplace, reading public, Romantic dilemma, publishing history, copyright, readership, poetic theory, literary reception, William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Percy Bysshe Shelley, John Keats, Lord Byron.
The book investigates how English Romantic poets navigated the transition from a traditional patronage system to a commercial literary marketplace, focusing on the tension between their artistic ideals and the realities of being read by an expanding public.
Key themes include the growth of the reading public, the professionalization of authors, the development of literary copyright, the impact of critical reviews on literary taste, and the evolving social role of the poet during the Romantic era.
It refers to the professional and existential challenge faced by Romantic poets: how to adapt their belief in a special, non-marketable vision of truth to a social context where literature was increasingly treated as a commodity.
The work utilizes a methodological pluralism, combining close readings of Romantic critical texts with socio-historical analyses of literature, economics, and psychology to contextualize the poets' statements.
The book shows that Romantic poets were not merely isolated "nightingales." Instead, they had complex, often conflicted relationships with the marketplace, ranging from commercial exploitation to deliberate avant-garde withdrawal.
The analysis is centered on concepts such as "commodification," "literary marketplace," "Romantic ideology," "posterity," "the public vs. the people," and "negative capability."
Many Romantic poets used "posterity" as an authority to bypass the criticism of their contemporaries. By claiming that true genius is only recognized by future generations, they could ignore the negative reception of current literary reviews.
Keats's career highlights the struggle for artistic autonomy; despite his own rejection of writing for a "public," his letters reveal profound anxieties regarding his market failure and the power of critical reviews to control literary reputation.
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