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Romanticism and Victorianism on the Net

Number 51, August 2008

Modelling the Self: Subjectivity and Identity in Romantic and Post-Romantic Thought and Culture

Guest-edited by Mark Sandy and Sarah Wootton

 

Managing Editor(s): Michael Eberle-Sinatra (founding editor [romantic]) and Dino Franco Felluga (editor [victorian])

Publisher: Université de Montréal

ISSN: 1916-1441 (digital)

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Article

Discursive Constructions of the Self in British Romanticism

Christoph Bode

LMU Munich

Abstract

This essay examines how subjective identities are discursively constructed in William Blake and P.B. Shelley, making brief references to William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Lord Byron, John Keats, and Charlotte Smith. It is argued that, although the poets come up with strikingly divergent solutions to the challenge of self-modelling, they face the same fundamental problems of self-grounding, working as they do within the paradox-prone paradigm of a Romantic self that tries to constitute itself out of itself. Comparing these Romantic poets with twentieth-century poetic models of selfhood and identity in Robert Frost and Wallace Stevens, this essay provides a tentative answer to the question of whether we continue to operate within the Romantic framework of discursive self-construction or whether in fact we have moved beyond this mode of self-construction.

Author: Christoph Bode
Title: Discursive Constructions of the Self in British Romanticism
Journal: Romanticism and Victorianism on the Net, Number 51, August 2008
URI: http://id.erudit.org/iderudit/019264ar

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