Romanticism, Spring 2009

By Timothy Morton

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Episodes: 26

Description

The Romantic period witnessed the birth of major new forms of writing and thinking that are still relevant today. The social transition from an age of commerce and colonialism to an era of industry and imperialism radically changed the entire surface of the world. Sciences that we take for granted were born: ecology, biology, psychology. Adam Smith wrote his work on capitalism and the politics of working class was born, though it was not yet called socialism. This was the age of William Blake and Mary Shelley, of Jane Austen and William Wordsworth, of Coleridge and Keats and Mary Wollstonecraft. This class will give you a sense of what the period looked like and felt like (and sounded like); and a feel for the ideas it established about poetry, society and nature, which are still with us. In particular, we'll be concentrating on how Romantic literature generated many of the ecological ideas that are with us today.

Episode Date
Frankenstein: Monsters R Us 2
Jun 02, 2009
Frankenstein: Monsters R Us 1
Jun 01, 2009
The Poetics of Protein
May 29, 2009
Percy Shelley: Reimagining Nature
May 20, 2009
Beautiful Soul Syndrome
May 19, 2009
John Keats: Romantic Consumerism 3
May 18, 2009
De Quincey: Romantic Consumerism 2
May 17, 2009
De Quincey: Romantic Consumerism 1
May 16, 2009
Ecological Coleridge: Queer Materiality
May 13, 2009
John Clare: It's Not Easy Being Green
May 11, 2009
Ecological Coleridge: Poetry as Algorithm
May 11, 2009
Ecological Coleridge: "It Happens"
May 06, 2009
William Wordsworth: Eco-Elegy
May 04, 2009
William Wordsworth: Dark Ecology
May 01, 2009
William Wordsworth: Green Poetics
Apr 30, 2009
William Wordsworth: Radical Poetics
Apr 27, 2009
Jane Austen: Narrative and Interiority 3
Apr 24, 2009
A Materialist Theory of Reading
Apr 18, 2009
Jane Austen: Narrative and Interiority 2
Apr 15, 2009
Jane Austen: Narrative and Interiority 1
Apr 13, 2009
William Blake: What is Coexistence?
Apr 10, 2009
William Blake: Are You Experienced? 2
Apr 08, 2009
William Blake: The Politics of Innocence 2
Apr 06, 2009
William Blake: Are You Experienced? 1
Apr 05, 2009
William Blake: The Politics of Innocence 1
Apr 01, 2009
Why Romanticism?
Mar 30, 2009