All Stories

  1. China and the Victorian Imagination: Empires Entwined. By Ross G. Forman. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013. 318 pp. ISBN 9781107013155 (cloth).
  2. Milton
  3. “The Kindness of my Friends in England”: Chinese Visitors to Britain in the Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries and Discourses of Friendship and Estrangement
  4. Introduction: China and the British Romantic Imagination
  5. Romanticism and the Question of the Stranger; Romantic Marginality: Nation and Empire on the Borders of the Page
  6. Forging Romantic China
  7. Race
  8. Coleridge's Lectures 1795: On Politics and Religion
  9. The Strange Case of Dr White and Mr De Quincey: Manchester, Medicine and Romantic Theories of Biological Racism
  10. John Thelwall in Saint Domingue: Race, Slavery, and Revolution inThe Daughter of Adoption: A Tale of Modern Times(1801)
  11. DerekHughes,Culture and Sacrifice: Ritual Death in Literature and Opera(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007), pp. xii + 313. £45 hardback. 9780521867337.
  12. Romantic Literature, Race, and Colonial Encounter
  13. Introduction
  14. Tartars, Monguls, Manchus, and Chinese
  15. Romantic Anatomies of Race: The New Comparative Anatomy and the Case of Victor Frankenstein
  16. The Race Idea and the Romantics: Coleridge and De Quincey
  17. Romanticism, Race, and Cannibalism in the “South Seas”
  18. “Candid Reflections:” The Idea of Race in the Debate over the Slave Trade and Slavery in the Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries
  19. Tim Fulford, Peter Kitson and Debbie Lee'sLiterature, Science and Exploration in the Romantic Era: Bodies of KnowledgeTim Fulford , Peter Kitson and Debbie Lee ,Literature, Science and Exploration in the Romantic Era: Bodies of Knowledge(Cambridge: Cam...
  20. Peter Kitson'sPlacing and Displacing RomanticismPeter Kitson (ed.),Placing and Displacing Romanticism(Hampshire: Ashgate, 2001), pp. xv + 232. £47.50 and $84.95 hardback. 0 7546 0602 3.
  21. Helen Thomas'sRomanticism and Slave Narratives: Transatlantic Testimoniesand Charlotte Sussman'sConsuming Anxieties: Consumer Protest, Gender and British Slavery, 1713–1833Helen Thomas ,Romanticism and Slave Narratives: Transatlantic Testimonies(Cambri...
  22. 'The Eucharist of Hell'; or, Eating People is Right: Romantic Representations of Cannibalism
  23. "Bales of Living Anguish": Representations of Race and the Slave in Romantic Writing
  24. Romanticism and Colonialism
  25. Peter Kitson, ed., Coleridge, Keats, and Shelley. New Casebooks. Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1996. ISBN: 0 333 60890 9 (paperback). Price: £10.99 (pb)
  26. Book reviews
  27. “Sages and patriots that being dead do yet speak to us”: Readings of the english revolution in the late eighteenth century
  28. Introduction
  29. “The electric fluid of truth”: The ideology of the Commonwealthsman in Coleridge'sthe plot discovered
  30. Reviews
  31. Coleridge, the French Revolution, and 'The Ancient Mariner': Collective Guilt and Individual Salvation
  32. Milton: The Romantics and After
  33. Political thinker
  34. Introduction
  35. Bibliography
  36. Blood Sugar
  37. Notes on contributors
  38. Chinese Gardens, Confucius, and The Prelude
  39. Cambridge Studies in Romanticism
  40. Romanticism and colonialism: races, places, peoples, 1800–1830
  41. Thomas Percy and the forging of Romantic China
  42. “A wonderful stateliness”: William Jones, Joshua Marshman, and the Bengal School of Sinology
  43. Establishing the “Great Divide”: scientific exchange, trade, and the Macartney embassy
  44. ‘That mighty Wall, not fabulous/ China’s stupendous mound!’ Romantic Period Accounts of China’s ‘Great Wall’
  45. “They thought that Jesus and Confucius were alike”: Robert Morrison, Malacca, and the missionary reading of China
  46. “Fruits of the highest culture may be improved and varied by foreign grafts”: the Canton School of Romantic Sinology – Staunton and Davis
  47. “You will be taking a trip into China, I suppose”: kowtows, teacups, and the evasions of British Romantic writing on China
  48. “Not a bit like the Chinese figures that adorn our chimney-pieces”: orphans and travellers – China on the stage