Transforming Tragedy, Identity, and Community - Crisafulli, Lilla; Rajan, Tilottama; Saglia, Diego; (ed.) - Prospero Internet Bookshop

Transforming Tragedy, Identity, and Community

 
Edition number: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Date of Publication:
 
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Short description:

This volume takes up the question of  transnational interactions in the Romantic period and the possibilities they created for the reinvention and questioning of existing models of identity and community.

This book was published as a special issue of European Romantic Review.

Long description:

The volume explores the interrelated topics of transnational identity in all its ambiguity and complexity, and the new ways of imagining community or Gemeinschaft (as distinct from society or Gesellschaft)) that this broader climate made possible in the Romantic period. The period crystallized, even if it did not inaugurate, an unprecedented interest in travel and exploration, as well as in the dissemination of the knowledge thus acquired through print media and learned societies. This dissemination expanded but also unmoored both epistemic and national boundaries. It thus led to what Antoine Berman in his study of translation tellingly calls ?the experience of the foreign,? as a zone of differences between and within selves, of which translation  was the material expression and symptom. As several essays in the collection suggest, it is this mental travel that  distinguishes the Romantic probing of transitional zones from that of earlier periods when travel and exploration were more purely under the sign of trade and commerce and thus of appropriation and colonization. The renegotiation of national and cultural boundaries also raises the question of what kinds of community are possible in this environment. A group of essays therefore explores the period?s alternative communities, and the ways in which it tested the limits of the very concept of community. Finally, the volume also explores the interrelationship between notions of identity and community by turning to Romantic theatre. Concentrating on the stage as monitor and mirror of contemporary ideological developments, a dedicated section of this book looks at the evolution of the tragic in European Romanticisms and how its inherent conflicts became vehicles for contrasting representations of individual and communal identities.

This book was published as a special issue of European Romantic Review

Table of Contents:

PART I

1. Introduction: the survival of tragedy in European Romanticisms  Diego Saglia

2. Tragedy without society: Alfieri?s Italian theater and the discourse of value  Joseph Luzzi

3. Alexandre Dumas p?re?s La Tour de Nesle (1832): tragedy or melodrama?  Barbara T. Cooper

4. The Polis, Romantic tragedy, and untimeliness in Frei Luis de Sousa  Helena Buescu

PART II

5. Introduction  Tilottama Rajan and Lilla Maria Crisafulli

Transnational Encounters

6. Theorizing a republican poetics: P.B. Shelley and Alfieri  Michael Rossington

7. The translator and the fairies: Christoph Martin Wieland?s Oberon and the British Romantics  Carlotta Farese

8. Romanticism displaced and placeless  Stuart Curran

9. Feeling cosmopolitan: the novel politician after Byron  Emily Allen and Dino Franco Felluga

Epistemic Encounters

10. Imagination as inter-science  Richard C. Sha

11. Formal relocations: the method of Southey?s Thalaba the Destroyer (1801)  Dahlia Porter

12. Gained horizons: Buddhism in Tibetan colonial travelogues  Elena Spandri

13. Euthanasia?s handkerchief; or, The object at the end of history  Sonia Hofkosh

Encountering Community

14. Readers respond to Godwin: Romantic republicanism in letters  Pamela Clemit

15. The (inoperative) epistolary community in Eliza Fenwick?s Secresy  Christopher Bundock

16. The inoperative community of Romantic psychiatry  Joel Faflak