Wordsworth's Profession: Form, Class, and the Logic of Early Romantic Cultural Production

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Stanford University Press, 1997 - 454 páginas
This book explores Wordsworth's professionalization as a writer in relation to the cultural and economic ascendancy of the English middle class between 1740 and 1820. Its wide-ranging interpretations are coordinated by a single, albeit highly ramified, critical hypothesis: that Romanticism's aesthetic forms simultaneously afforded the middle classes an imaginary furlough from the impinging consciousness of their tenuous socioeconomic status.

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