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Romanticism and Popular MagicRobert Southey’s Conservative Occult

Romanticism and Popular Magic: Robert Southey’s Conservative Occult [This chapter investigates Robert Southey’s Poems 1799 as an anxious reaction to Wordsworth’s employment of popular magic as an emancipating force. In ‘The Witch’, ‘The Cross Roads’, and ‘The Mad Woman’ the occult practitioner is revised as a dangerously reactionary figure, whose occult credentials further entrap their communities (and themselves) in outmoded dependence on patriarchal power. Poems 1799 is a stage of struggle for Southey’s political identity, as anxieties regarding his deepening conservatism are enacted in his revocalisations of Lyrical Ballads. Finally, the chapter turns to Thalaba the Destroyer. Written at the height of Southey’s apostate anxiety, the oriental drama is the site of debate regarding political identities and the uses of the occult at the end of a revolutionary decade.] http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png

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Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Copyright
© The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s) 2019
ISBN
978-3-030-04809-9
Pages
215 –261
DOI
10.1007/978-3-030-04810-5_7
Publisher site
See Chapter on Publisher Site

Abstract

[This chapter investigates Robert Southey’s Poems 1799 as an anxious reaction to Wordsworth’s employment of popular magic as an emancipating force. In ‘The Witch’, ‘The Cross Roads’, and ‘The Mad Woman’ the occult practitioner is revised as a dangerously reactionary figure, whose occult credentials further entrap their communities (and themselves) in outmoded dependence on patriarchal power. Poems 1799 is a stage of struggle for Southey’s political identity, as anxieties regarding his deepening conservatism are enacted in his revocalisations of Lyrical Ballads. Finally, the chapter turns to Thalaba the Destroyer. Written at the height of Southey’s apostate anxiety, the oriental drama is the site of debate regarding political identities and the uses of the occult at the end of a revolutionary decade.]

Published: Jan 17, 2019

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