All Stories

  1. Print, Publicity, and Popular Radicalism in the 1790s
  2. Fallon and Mee Romanticism and Revolution
  3. Romanticism and Revolution
  4. Recent Studies in the Nineteenth Century
  5. Books Received
  6. William Blake
  7. ‘Mutual Intercourse’ and ‘Licentious Discussion’ inThe Microcosm of London
  8. Colin Jones, Josephine McDonagh and Jon Mee (eds.),Charles Dickens,A Tale of Two Citiesand the French Revolution(Houndsmills: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009), 212 + xi pp. £50.00, $80.00 (USD), €60.99, ISBN-13: 9780230537781
  9. Conversable WorldsLiterature, Contention, and Community 1762 to 1830
  10. Epilogue
  11. Introduction: Opening Gambit
  12. Proliferating Worlds, 1762–1790
  13. Jane Austen and the Hazard of Conversation
  14. Hazlitt, Hunt, and Cockney Conversability
  15. Some Paradigms of Conversability in the Eighteenth Century
  16. Critical Conversation in the 1790s: Godwin, Hays, and Wollstonecraft
  17. ‘Language Really Used by Men’: Cowper, Coleridge, and Wordsworth
  18. The Cambridge Introduction to Charles Dickens
  19. Blake and Conflict
  20. Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities and the French Revolution
  21. Anger, Revolution, and Romanticism . Andrew M. Stauffer. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005. Pp. x+221.
  22. THE RADICAL ENTHUSIASM OF BLAKE'S THE MARRJAGE OF HEA VEN AND HELL
  23. Anti-Jacobin Novels: Representation and Revolution
  24. Romanticism, Enthusiasm, and Regulation
  25. Introduction: Situating Enthusiasm
  26. Conclusion Enthusiastic Misreadings
  27. Commanding Enthusiasm through the Eighteenth Century
  28. Enthusiasm, Liberty, and Benevolence in the 1790s
  29. Coleridge, Prophecy, and Imagination
  30. Barbauld, Devotion, and the Woman Prophet
  31. Wordsworth’s Chastened Enthusiasm
  32. Energy and Enthusiasm in Blake
  33. The Cambridge Companion to English Literature, 1740–1830
  34. Mopping Up Spilt Religion: The Problem of Enthusiasm
  35. NOT AT HOME IN ENGLISH?: INDIA'S FOREIGN-RETURNED FICTIONS
  36. Not at home in English?: India's foreign-returned fictions
  37. An Oxford Companion to the Romantic Age
  38. After midnight: The Indian novel in English of the 80s and 90s
  39. Anxieties of Enthusiasm: Coleridge, Prophecy, and Popular Politics in the 1790s
  40. Dangerous Enthusiasm
  41. ‘Northern Antiquities’: Bards, Druids, and Ancient Liberties
  42. ‘Forms of Dark Delusion’: Mythography and Politics
  43. Introduction: Blake the Bricoleur
  44. Blake, the Bible, and its Critics in the 1790s
  45. Conclusion: A Radical without an Audience?
  46. ‘Every Honest Man is a Prophet’: Popular Enthusiasm and Radical Millenarianism
  47. Blake and the poetics of enthusiasm
  48. Preface
  49. Chronology
  50. Afterword: Dickens's world
  51. Notes
  52. Cambridge Introductions to …
  53. Further reading
  54. Dickens and Ways of Seeing the French Revolution
  55. Series list
  56. Frontmatter
  57. Blake's politics in history
  58. Austen’s treacherous ivory
  59. Dickens the entertainer: ‘People must be amuthed’
  60. Dickens and language: ‘What I meantersay’
  61. Dickens and the city: ‘Animate London … inanimate London’
  62. Adapting Dickens: ‘He do the police in different voices’
  63. Criticism, taste, aesthetics
  64. Literature and politics
  65. Sensibility
  66. ‘Severe contentions of friendship’: Barbauld, conversation, and dispute
  67. Dickens, gender, and domesticity: ‘Be it ever … so ghastly … there's no place like it’
  68. Popular radical culture