Introduction, Evan Gottlieb, Juliet Shields; Part 1 From Local to National; Chapter 1 “Really a sweet town”: Laying the Scene Locally in Restoration Drama, Bridget Orr; Chapter 2 What’s British about The British Recluse ? The Political Geography of Early Eighteenth-Century Fiction, Juliet Shields; Chapter 3 Local Languages: Obscurity and Open Secrets in Scots Vernacular Poetry, Janet Sorensen; Chapter 4 At Home in the Churchyard: Graves, Localism, and Literary Heritage in the Prose Pastoral, Paul Westover; Part 2 From National to Global; Chapter 5 No Place Like Home: From Local to Global (and Back Again) in the Gothic Novel, Evan Gottlieb; Chapter 6 Resisting the “Democratic Spirit”: English Catholicism and the Cisalpine Movement, Scott M. Cleary; Chapter 7 Connecting Eighteenth-Century India: Orientalism, Della Cruscanism, and the Translocal Poetics of William and Anna Maria Jones, James Mulholland; Part 3 Romanticism and the Return to the Local; Chapter 8 “Usurpt by Cyclops”: Rivers, Industry, and Environment in Eighteenth-Century Poetry, Penny Fielding; Chapter 9 Local Poetry in the Midlands: Francis Mundy’s Needwood Forest and Anna Seward’s Lichfield Poems, JoEllent DeLucia; Chapter 10 Homes and Haunts: Austen’s and Mitford’s English Idylls, Deidre Lynch; Knowing Your Place, Dafydd Moore;
Evan Gottlieb is Associate Professor of English at Oregon State University, USA, and Juliet Shields is Associate Professor of English at the University of Washington, USA. Evan Gottlieb, Juliet Shields, Bridget Orr, Janet Sorensen, Paul Westover, Scott M. Cleary, James Mulholland, Penny Fielding, JoEllen DeLucia, Deidre Lynch, Dafydd Moore.
'Recommended.' Choice '... the collection's focus remains very closely on the literary throughout - a category which is defined refreshingly broadly, and within which is produced a detailed, nuanced survey of the role of authorial tradition and reading practice.' Romantic Textualities 'This excellent collection of essays contributes to a growing body of critical work that challenges the predominance of the interpretative model of the nation-state ... cumulatively these essays represent an advertisement for the benefits of moving beyond monolithic assumptions about place, such as that of centre and periphery, or local and national, towards more complex understandings of networks between places and between different understandings of place.' Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies 'Readers of this collection will come away with provocative new ways of theorizing place and decentering nation, and Dafydd Moore's insightful coda helps connect such models to broader trends in place-based research.' BARS Review
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