Corporate Romanticism

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A01=Daniel M. Stout
action
Author_Daniel M. Stout
Category=DSBF
Category=DSK
character
corporate personhood
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
industrialism
justice
law
liberalism
Romanticism
the corporation
the novel

Product details

  • ISBN 9780823272235
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Dec 2016
  • Publisher: Fordham University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Corporate Romanticism offers an alternative history of the connections between modernity, individualism, and the novel. In early nineteenth-century England, two developments—the rise of corporate persons and the expanded scale of industrial action—undermined the basic assumption underpinning both liberalism and the law: that individual human persons can be meaningfully correlated with specific actions and particular effects. Reading works by Godwin, Austen, Hogg, Mary Shelley, and Dickens alongside a wide-ranging set of debates in nineteenth-century law and Romantic politics and aesthetics, Daniel Stout argues that the novel, a literary form long understood as a reflection of individualism’s ideological ascent, in fact registered the fragile fictionality of accountable individuals in a period defined by corporate actors and expansively entangled fields of action.
Examining how liberalism, the law, and the novel all wrestled with the moral implications of a highly collectivized and densely packed modernity, Corporate Romanticism reconfigures our sense of the nineteenth century and its novels, arguing that we see in them not simply the apotheosis of laissez-fair individualism but the first chapter of a crucial and distinctly modern problem about how to fit the individualist and humanist terms of justice onto a world in which the most consequential agents are no longer persons.

Daniel Stout is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Mississippi.

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