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  • Cited by 13
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
January 2010
Print publication year:
2007
Online ISBN:
9780511484247

Book description

The idea that the inspired poet stands apart from the marketplace is considered central to British Romanticism. However, Romantic authors were deeply concerned with how their occupation might be considered a kind of labour comparable to that of the traditional professions. In the process of defining their work as authors, Wordsworth, Southey and Coleridge - the 'Lake school' - aligned themselves with emerging constructions of the 'professional gentleman' that challenged the vocational practices of late eighteenth-century British culture. They modelled their idea of authorship on the learned professions of medicine, church, and law, which allowed them to imagine a productive relationship to the marketplace and to adopt the ways eighteenth-century poets had related their poetry to other kinds of intellectual work. In this work, Goldberg explores the ideas of professional risk, evaluation and competition that the writers developed as a response to a variety of eighteenth-century depictions of the literary career.

Reviews

"Brian Goldberg’s richly instructive new study, The Lake Poets and ProfessionalIdentity, considerably deepens an ongoing conversation about the professionalization of the poet in the Romantic era. He confirms the complexity of theRomantic poets’ stance toward the literary marketplace,..."
-Sarah M. Zimmerman, Fordham University

"Collectively and individually, the Lake poets looked back to the examples of eighteenth-century predecessors—Savage, James Beattie, and William Cowper, in particular—both as representatives of a fading systemthat still held the appeal of relative stability and as protoprofessional figures already engaged in theorizing the terms of a new independence."
-Sarah M. Zimmerman, Fordham University

"Goldberg’s argument is built on nuance, half-identifications, and subtledifferentiations,moving between text and career repeatedly to account forthe Lake poets’ tenacious efforts to forge a new professionalism. This methodologysucceeds in generating a thick fabric of poetic and biographicalallusion but sacrifices some of the broader contours, both historical and argumentative."
-Sarah M. Zimmerman, Fordham University

"The primary benefit of this critical approach is the argument’s seamlessness;Goldberg weaves an intricate, substantive account of the poets’ sustainedefforts in the late 1790s to create a new professional paradigm thatshould have us rereading their works for informative glimpses of that workin progress."
-Sarah M. Zimmerman, Fordham University

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Contents

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