Eighteen Hundred and Eleven: Poetry, Protest and Economic Crisis

Author:   E. J. Clery (University of Southampton)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
Volume:   116
ISBN:  

9781107189225


Pages:   326
Publication Date:   09 June 2017
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Eighteen Hundred and Eleven: Poetry, Protest and Economic Crisis


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Author:   E. J. Clery (University of Southampton)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
Imprint:   Cambridge University Press
Volume:   116
Dimensions:   Width: 16.00cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.610kg
ISBN:  

9781107189225


ISBN 10:   1107189225
Pages:   326
Publication Date:   09 June 2017
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Introduction: the puzzle and the myth; Part I. The Making of Eighteen Hundred and Eleven: 1. Economic warfare; 2. Writing for the enemy; 3. Commercial dissent; 4. Stoic patriotism; 5. The prophet motive; 6. Ruin: doing the policy in different voices; 7. Lady credit; Part II. What Happened Next: 8. Publication to vindication: a chronology; 9. The summer of 1812 and after; Conclusion.

Reviews

'Clery's subject is Anna Letitia Barbauld's poem 'Eighteen Hundred and Eleven', published in February 1812 as an attack on the British government's policies, particularly, according to Clery, the Orders in Council of 1807 limiting trade. ... Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.' J. Rosenblum, Choice


'Clery's subject is Anna Letitia Barbauld's poem 'Eighteen Hundred and Eleven', published in February 1812 as an attack on the British government's policies, particularly, according to Clery, the Orders in Council of 1807 limiting trade. ... Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.' J. Rosenblum, Choice 'E. J. Clery aims definitively to put to rest the myth about Barbauld's sensitivity to criticism; to rehabilitate her image; and to offer a new interpretation of the poem as a response to specific economic problems and part of a successful effort to force the government to address them ... this illuminating case study is able to give a detailed account of the year 1811 as well as of its namesake poem.' H. J. Jackson, The Times Literary Supplement 'The book is a game-changer not only in its account of the strategies and distinctiveness of Barbauld's poem but also in painstakingly elucidating how a poem actually changes political-cultural realities ... It will appeal to scholars interested in Barbauld and/or women writers; in the Dissenting community and, especially the Aikin-Barbauld circle; in connections between economic and poetic debates and practices in the Romantic era; in the literary-political culture of Britain from 1808-12, including the impact of periodical reviews ... Clery's Eighteen Hundred and Eleven is a bold book that is true to the spirit of Barbauld's poem in not only showing how but also believing that a literary work engages times of crisis with an efficacy that acknowledges the power of public fantasies and reasoned debate in shaping daily reality.' Julie Carlson, University of California, Santa Barbara 'E. J. Clery's passionate and well-researched study on Eighteen Hundred and Eleven is the work that Anna Barbauld's long neglected 334-line poem deserves ... Clery writes with conviction and verve; this is a work whose tone is con brio tracing the contexts of politics and economy in the years surrounding the writing of the poem, but its aims are more wide-ranging than this ambitious re-evaluation of one work might suggest. Clery makes a case for rereading women Romantic poets' work as something other than 'narratives of defeat and disappointment, compromise and constraint' as well as recognizing that they wrote in 'collaboration and dialogue' with men ... E. J. Clery's excellent book is highly recommended.' Lisa Vargo, The BARS Review 'It is written like a detective novel, and certainly has the pace of one ... a quiet triumph of staging and presentation, and deeply original not only for its specific argument, but in its narrative method ... A model of how transformational a feminist resistance to the commonplaces of 'women's history' (the usual narrative of silencing) can be.' The Rose Mary Crawshay Prize Committee 'Clery's subject is Anna Letitia Barbauld's poem 'Eighteen Hundred and Eleven', published in February 1812 as an attack on the British government's policies, particularly, according to Clery, the Orders in Council of 1807 limiting trade. ... Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.' J. Rosenblum, Choice 'E. J. Clery aims definitively to put to rest the myth about Barbauld's sensitivity to criticism; to rehabilitate her image; and to offer a new interpretation of the poem as a response to specific economic problems and part of a successful effort to force the government to address them ... this illuminating case study is able to give a detailed account of the year 1811 as well as of its namesake poem.' H. J. Jackson, The Times Literary Supplement 'The book is a game-changer not only in its account of the strategies and distinctiveness of Barbauld's poem but also in painstakingly elucidating how a poem actually changes political-cultural realities ... It will appeal to scholars interested in Barbauld and/or women writers; in the Dissenting community and, especially the Aikin-Barbauld circle; in connections between economic and poetic debates and practices in the Romantic era; in the literary-political culture of Britain from 1808-12, including the impact of periodical reviews ... Clery's Eighteen Hundred and Eleven is a bold book that is true to the spirit of Barbauld's poem in not only showing how but also believing that a literary work engages times of crisis with an efficacy that acknowledges the power of public fantasies and reasoned debate in shaping daily reality.' Julie Carlson, University of California, Santa Barbara 'E. J. Clery's passionate and well-researched study on Eighteen Hundred and Eleven is the work that Anna Barbauld's long neglected 334-line poem deserves ... Clery writes with conviction and verve; this is a work whose tone is con brio tracing the contexts of politics and economy in the years surrounding the writing of the poem, but its aims are more wide-ranging than this ambitious re-evaluation of one work might suggest. Clery makes a case for rereading women Romantic poets' work as something other than 'narratives of defeat and disappointment, compromise and constraint' as well as recognizing that they wrote in 'collaboration and dialogue' with men ... E. J. Clery's excellent book is highly recommended.' Lisa Vargo, The BARS Review 'It is written like a detective novel, and certainly has the pace of one ... a quiet triumph of staging and presentation, and deeply original not only for its specific argument, but in its narrative method ... A model of how transformational a feminist resistance to the commonplaces of 'women's history' (the usual narrative of silencing) can be.' The Rose Mary Crawshay Prize Committee


'Clery's subject is Anna Letitia Barbauld's poem 'Eighteen Hundred and Eleven', published in February 1812 as an attack on the British government's policies, particularly, according to Clery, the Orders in Council of 1807 limiting trade. ... Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.' J. Rosenblum, Choice 'E. J. Clery aims definitively to put to rest the myth about Barbauld's sensitivity to criticism; to rehabilitate her image; and to offer a new interpretation of the poem as a response to specific economic problems and part of a successful effort to force the government to address them ... this illuminating case study is able to give a detailed account of the year 1811 as well as of its namesake poem.' H. J. Jackson, The Times Literary Supplement


Author Information

E. J. Clery is professor of English Literature at the University of Southampton. Her publications include The Rise of Supernatural Fiction, 1762–1800 (Cambridge, 1995), Women's Gothic from Clara Reeve to Mary Shelley (2000), The Feminization Debate in Eighteenth-Century England (2004) and Jane Austen: The Banker's Daughter (2017). In 2013 she was awarded a Leverhulme Trust Major Fellowship for the project 'Romantic-Era Women Writers and Economic Debate'. She lectures and broadcasts on eighteenth-century and Romantic literature, book history and the cultural history of economics.

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