Engaged Romanticism
Subtitle
Romanticism as Praxis
Edited by Mark Lussier and Bruce Matsunaga
In November 2006, the International Conference on Romanticism convened for its annual conference on the campus of Arizona State University and explored a wide range of work identified as "engaged romantics," as a mode and a practice rather than simply as a literary historical period defined by a specific temporal spectrum, usually 1750 to 1850. As the introduction to the volume suggests, most writers during the period were actively engaged in the cultural articulation of the aesthetics, criticism, ethics, poetics and politics of the age, and a large number of writers deployed their talents to help transform the public sphere, whether shaping responses to the practices of slavery or resisting the emergence of a crystallized form of Newtonianism at the foundation of Enlightenment epistemology. The intellectual and disciplinary range of the essays included in this volume pay tribute to this often neglected aspect of the revolutionary dictates of what has come to be called "Romanticism," and the following critical essays, offered by both thoroughly established and relatively new voices within Romantic studies, examine virtually every aspect of this approach to Romantic thought and writing. Whether focused on the formal and intellectual practices at the foundation of the novel, the philosophical resonance of William Wordsworth within emergent forms of eco-criticism, the play of the transatlantic Romantic imagination, the aesthetic commitments of Romantic art and music or the current process of pedagogical engagements, the essays sound the depths of what engaged practice can accomplish, both in the age of Romanticism itself as well as our own moment.
Bios
Mark Lussier is professor in the Department of English and senior sustainability scholar in the Julie Ann Wrigley Global Institute of Sustainability at ASU.
Bruce Matsunaga is associate research professional in the Department of English at ASU, where he also earned his Master of Arts in 2006 and doctorate in 2013 in English.