Reviews
Wang examines the relationship of key concepts involved in understanding of British and European Romanticism... The themes of sensation and its counterpart sobriety are central terms in the discourse around the concept of Romanticism as a movement.
To read Romantic Sobriety is to become freshly aware of the disciplinary stakes involved in thinking through the conflicted historicity of what Wordsworth called "sensations sweet, / Felt in the blood, and felt along the heart."
A trenchant critique of the narratives of sobriety that, from the Romantic period itself to our own time, have tried to dampen Romanticism’s most powerful energies in the name of a greater maturity or enlightenment. Wang not only provides provocative readings of a range of literary texts but also makes an argument that will be hard to ignore for the continuing metatheoretical importance of Romanticism in the field of literature and knowledge more generally.
A panoramic view of the theoretical options open to the self-aware American academic critic wanting to write about Romanticism.
Book Details
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Sensation of Romanticism
Part I: Periodicity
1. Romantic Sobriety
2. Kant All Lit Up: Romanticism, Periodicity, and the Catachresis of Genius
Part II: Theory
3. De Man
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Sensation of Romanticism
Part I: Periodicity
1. Romantic Sobriety
2. Kant All Lit Up: Romanticism, Periodicity, and the Catachresis of Genius
Part II: Theory
3. De Man, Marx, Rousseau, and the Machine
4. Against Theory beside Romanticism: Mute Bodies, Fanatical Seeing
5. The Sensation of the Signifier
6. Ghost Theory
Part III: Texts
7. Lyric Ritalin: Time and History in "Ode to the West Wind"
8. No Satisfaction: High Theory, Cultural Studies, and Don Juan
9. Gothic Thought and Surviving Romanticism in Zofloya and Jane Eyre
10. Coming Attractions: Lamia and Cinematic Sensation
Coda: The Embarrassment of Romanticism
Notes
Index