Romantic Capabilities

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Author_Mike Goode
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Product details

  • ISBN 9780198862369
  • Weight: 638g
  • Dimensions: 163 x 236mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Oct 2020
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Romantic Capabilities discusses the relationship between popular new media uses of literary texts. Devising and modelling an original critical methodology that bridges historicist literary criticism and reception studies with media studies and formalism, this volume contends that how a literary text behaves when it encounters new media reveals medial capabilities of the text that can transform how we understand its significance for the original historical context for which it was created. Following an introductory theoretical chapter that explains the book's unconventional approach to the archive, Romantic Capabilities analyzes significant popular "media behaviors" exhibited by three major Romantic British literary corpuses: the viral circulation of William Blake's pictures and proverbs across contemporary media, the gravitation of Victorian panorama painters and 3D photographers to Walter Scott's historical fictions, and the ongoing popular practice of writing fanfiction set in the worlds of Jane Austen's novels and their imaginary country estates. The result is a book that reveals Blake to be an important early theorist of viral media and the law, Scott's novels to be studies in vision that helped give rise to modern immersive media, and Austenian realism to be a mode of ecological design whose project fanfiction grasps and extends. It offers insight into the politics of virality, the dependence of immersion on a sense of frame, and the extent to which eighteenth-century landscape gardening anticipated Deleuzian ideas of the "virtual" by granting existence to reality's as-yet-unrealized capabilities.
Mike Goode is Associate Professor of English at Syracuse University, where he researches and teaches on eighteenth- and nineteenth-century British literature and culture, media studies, visual culture, gender, historiography, and critical theory. He received his bachelor's degree in Economics from Princeton University in 1993 and his Ph.D. in English from the University of Chicago in 2001.

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