Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The New Historicism
View through CrossRef
Chapter 2 studies the relationship between historicism and Romanticism. It locates the two between Enlightenment materialism, on one side, and Marxian historical and dialectical materialism, on the other. In so doing, it isolates a paradox of materialism—namely, its production of the very concepts that undo it. These include the ideas of knowing as dissociated conceptual activity, and consciousness as absolute negativity. Romanticism and historicism, it is argued, represent solutions to a common problem—a claim defended through a reading of Wordsworth’s sonnet “The world is too much with us.” In considering how we position ourselves in relation to past literature, the chapter evaluates the choices between contemplation and empathy, knowledge and power, blame and defense. As such, it represents the first move in a self-critical turn on the new historicist method that had shaped the author’s—and part of the field’s—work in the previous decade.
Title: The New Historicism
Description:
Chapter 2 studies the relationship between historicism and Romanticism.
It locates the two between Enlightenment materialism, on one side, and Marxian historical and dialectical materialism, on the other.
In so doing, it isolates a paradox of materialism—namely, its production of the very concepts that undo it.
These include the ideas of knowing as dissociated conceptual activity, and consciousness as absolute negativity.
Romanticism and historicism, it is argued, represent solutions to a common problem—a claim defended through a reading of Wordsworth’s sonnet “The world is too much with us.
” In considering how we position ourselves in relation to past literature, the chapter evaluates the choices between contemplation and empathy, knowledge and power, blame and defense.
As such, it represents the first move in a self-critical turn on the new historicist method that had shaped the author’s—and part of the field’s—work in the previous decade.
Related Results
Historicism and the Human Sciences in Victorian Britain
Historicism and the Human Sciences in Victorian Britain
Historicism and the Human Sciences in Victorian Britain explores the rise and nature of historicist thinking about such varied topics as life, race, character, literature, language...
Jena 1789–1819
Jena 1789–1819
Jena philosophy, historicism, and literature energized nineteenth-century European intellectual life. Their key concerns were time and meaning, quintessentiallyRomantic, but they s...
Historicism and Its Consequences
Historicism and Its Consequences
Moreover, standard histories of Athens are riddled with the same kinds of problems that postcolonial critics have seen in the mainstream “histories” of non-western lifeworlds. To s...
Rethinking Mahler
Rethinking Mahler
Gustav Mahler’s anniversary years (2010–11) have provided an opportunity to rethink the composer’s position within the musical, cultural and multi-disciplinary landscapes of the tw...
Mahler and the Game of History
Mahler and the Game of History
For obvious reasons, the understanding and writing of music history have favoured a linear model founded in causality and chronology. Like many disciplines, however, historiographi...
The Arden Research Handbook of Contemporary Shakespeare Criticism
The Arden Research Handbook of Contemporary Shakespeare Criticism
The Arden Research Handbook of Contemporary Shakespeare Criticism is a wide-ranging, authoritative guide to research on critical approaches to Shakespeare by an international team ...
Shakespeare and Marx
Shakespeare and Marx
Abstract
Marxist cultural theory underlies much teaching and research in university departments of literature and has played a crucial role in the development of rec...
Russian Literature since 1991
Russian Literature since 1991
Russian Literature since 1991 is the first comprehensive, single-volume compendium of modern scholarship on post-Soviet Russian literature. The volume encompasses broad, complex an...

