Wordsworth Before Coleridge

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A01=Mark Bruhn
Author_Mark Bruhn
British Romanticism
Cambridge Platonism
Cambridge University
Category=DSBF
Category=DSC
Category=QDTN
English Kantianism
Ennobling Interchange
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eq_biography-true-stories
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Evening Walk
Expanded Version
grammar
Great Philosophic Poem
hawkshead
Hawkshead Grammar School
Higher Geometry
Human Beings
Human Kind
Human Suffering
Incipient Madness
intellectual formation of Romantic poets
Introductory View
Mark J. Bruhn
mind-matter dualism
Periodical Reviewers
philosophical poetry analysis
poetic imagination theory
Pope's Essay
Pope’s Essay
Ruined Cottage
school
Stewart's Elements
Stewart’s Elements
Sublimer Mathematics
Tranquil Soul
True Intellectual System
Wordsworth's Dream
Wordsworth's Letter
Wordsworth's Philosophy
Wordsworth's Poetics
Wordsworth's Reading
Wordsworth’s Dream
Wordsworth’s Letter
Wordsworth’s Philosophy
Wordsworth’s Poetics
Wordsworth’s Reading

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138486447
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Feb 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Drawing extensively upon archival resources and manuscript evidence, Wordsworth Before Coleridge rewrites the early history of Wordsworth’s intellectual development and thereby overturns a century-old consensus that derives his most important philosophical ideas from Coleridge. Beginning with Wordsworth’s mathematical and poetic studies at Hawkshead Grammar School and Cambridge University, both of which tutored the young poet in mind-matter dualism, the book charts the process by which Wordsworth came, not to reject this philosophical foundation, but to reevaluate the indispensable role of passion within it. Prompted by his reading in 1793 or early 1794 of Dugald Stewart’s Elements of the Philosophy of the Human Mind, Wordsworth rejected the exclusive rationality of William Godwin’s political philosophy and the anti-passionate morality of Alexander Pope’s philosophical poetics. Subsequent exposure, between 1795 and 1797, to Cambridge Platonism and English Kantianism supplied the key ideas of mind-nature fitness and multilevel psychological activity that, along with Stewart’s analysis of imaginative association, animate Wordsworth’s signature philosophy of "feeling intellect," from the initial drafts of The Pedlar and The Prelude in 1798 to the "Prospectus" to The Recluse and The Excursion, published together in 1814. By presenting for the first time a fully nuanced account of Wordsworth’s intellectual formation prior to the advent of Coleridge as his close companion and creative collaborator, Wordsworth Before Coleridge reveals at long last the true sources and abiding originality of the poet’s philosophical mind.

Mark J. Bruhn, Professor of English at Regis University (Denver, Colorado), holds a PhD in English from Dalhousie University (Halifax, Nova Scotia). He is coeditor of Cognition, Literature, and History (Routledge, 2014) and guest editor of a special double-issue of Poetics Today on "Poetics and Cognitive Science" (2011). Bruhn has published widely on English literature from Chaucer and Spenser to Wallace Stevens and Margaret Atwood, and recent essays on Wordsworth in particular appear in The Oxford Handbook of Cognitive Literary Studies (2015), The Oxford Handbook of William Wordsworth (2015), and The Palgrave Handbook of Affect Studies and Textual Criticism (2017).

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