

An edition of Contest for Cultural Authority (1999)
Hazlitt, Coleridge, and the distresses of the Regency
By Robert Keith Lapp
Publish Date
1999
Publisher
Wayne State University Press
Language
eng
Pages
205
Description:
"Contest for Cultural Authority takes a fresh look at one of the scandals of literary history: William Hazlitt's harshly satirical reviews of Samuel Taylor Coleridge in the Regency press. Traditionally deplored as "malignant" personal attacks on a former friend, Hazlitt's eight reviews of Coleridge's writings between 1816 and 1818 engage such landmark works as Christabel, The Statesman's Manual, and the Biographia Literaria, harnessing the rising power of Regency review-criticism to devastating effect. By taking seriously Hazlitt's own classification of these articles as "political essays," and by relocating them within the turbulent public debates of the late Regency, Robert Keith Lapp discovers in them an indispensable critique of Coleridge's conservative response to the post-Waterloo crisis known as the "Distresses of the Country.""--BOOK JACKET.
subjects: 19th century, Civilization, Criticism, Criticism and interpretation, England, Great Britain, History, Knowledge, Literature, Literature and history, Literature and society, Regency, Letterkunde, Engels, Literatuurkritiek, Art, Literaturfehde, Hazlitt, william, 1778-1830, Coleridge, samuel taylor, 1772-1834, Great britain, kings and rulers, English literature, history and criticism, 19th century, Politics and culture, Great britain, intellectual life, Knowledge and learning
People: Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834), William Hazlitt (1778-1830)
Places: England, Great Britain
Times: 19th century, George III, 1760-1820