Thursday, September 19, 2019
Romanticism Essays -- Romantic Period Essays
Romanticism    "In spite of its representation of potentially diabolical and satanic  powers, its historical and geographic location and its satire on  extreme Calvinism, James Hogg's Private Memoirs and Confessions of a  Justified Sinner proves to be a novel that a dramatises a crisis of  identity, a theme which is very much a Romantic concern." Discuss.    Examination of Romantic texts provides us with only a limited and much  debated degree of commonality. However despite the disparity of  Romanticism (or Romanticisms) as a movement it would be true to say  that a prevalent aspect of Romantic literature that unites many  different forms of the movement, is a concern with the divided self.    As the empirical Rationalism of the eighteenth century was partially  subverted by the subjective metaphysical reflection in the nineteenth  artists tended to examine wider issues from an introspective starting  point. The idea of the divided self became a motif from Blake's  "Albion" to Byron's Manfred to Keat's musings on the disassociated  nature of the Poetic Self. Some writers personified this division in  distinct physical manifestations, usually a hero and his inverse  doppelganger. Most famously in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, the  various "selves" in De Quincey's Confessions of an English Opium Eater  and in the complex mirroring of major characters in James Hogg's  ambiguous masterpiece Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified  Sinner.    Although critics (as Andrea Henderson in Romantic Identities) have  debated the extent that Romanticism dramatises divisive crises with  the psychological self , the vast majority of writing on the subject  agrees that "crisis of identity" is certainly a "Romantic concern".  Hugo Donelley draws attention to the "Modernis...              ... Doubleness of Hogg's Confessions  and the Tradition", Studies in Scottish Literature, Vol. 18, pp.  59-74.    Punter, D. "The dialectic of persecution" in The Literature of Terror  Volume I, 1996, Longman Group (David Punter), London and New York.    Simpson, L. James Hogg, a Critical Study, 1962, Oliver and Boyd,  Edinburgh.    Wittig, Kurt. The Scottish Tradition in Literature, 1958, Oliver and  Boyd, Edinburgh.    Wu, Duncan. "Introduction" in Romanticism: An Anthology    WEBSITES.    http://prometheus.cc.emory.edu/panels/4C/R.Incorvati.html    Incorvati, R. "Dialogue and Marginality in James Hogg's Confessions of  a Justified Sinner." Prometheus Unplugged Website.    ---------------------------------------------------------------------    [1] Although Hogg was writing in a pre-Freudian era the essentials of      his psychodynamic theory were as pertinent in 1834 as they were in      1934.                      
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