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Long before Wordsworth etherealized him as 'the marvellous Boy / The sleepless Soul that perished in its pride', Thomas Chatterton was touted as the 'second Shakespeare' by eighteenth-century Shakespeareans, ranked among the leading British poets by prominent literary critics, and likened to the fashionable modern prose stylists Macpherson, Sterne, and Smollett. His pseudo-medieval Rowley poems, in particular, engendered a renewed fascination with ancient English literature.With Chatterton as its case study, this book offers new insights into the formation and development of literary scholarship in the period, from the periodical press to the public lecture, from the review to the anthology, from textual to biographical criticism. Cook demonstrates that, while major scholars found Chatterton to be a pertinent subject for multiple literary debates in the eighteenth century, by the end of the Romantic period he had become, and still remains, an unsettling model of hubristic genius.List of Illustrations Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations Introduction 1. Genius and Scholarship 2. Tyrwhitt's Rowley, or 'what the author wrote' 3. Miscellanies and the Moderns 4. The Rowley Controversy 5. 'Too proud for pity': The Sentimental Reader 6. 'Neglected Genius': The Romantic Canon Afterword Select Bibliography Index
Daniel Cook offers the fullest treatment yet available of the earliest appearances of Chattertons work in print. He gives a meticulous account of the earliest publication of work by Chatterton in magazines, and of the manner in which Chattertons earliest editors presented his work & . (Richard Cronin, Romantic Review, Vol. 27 (1), February, 2016)
'[An] elegantly scrupulous study... Cook's contribution to eighteenth-century and Romantic studies is to show how Chatterton's problematic status as an author figure is in fact a striking reflection of rapidly changing and competing attitudes towards literature, criticism, the English past, thls~
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