Imagining the King’s Death: Figurative Treason, Fantasies of Regicide, 1793–1796, John Barrell, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000 [Book Review]

Historical Materialism 21 (1):196-208 (2013)
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Abstract

This review essay has two divisions. In its first division it sets out a brief overview of recent Marxist research in the field of ‘Romanticism’, identifying two major lines of inquiry. On the one hand, the attempt to expand our sense of what might constitute a ruthless critique of social relations; on the other, an attempt to develop a materialist account of aesthetic disengagement. This first division concludes with an extended summary of John Barrell’s account of the treason trials of the middle 1790s, as set out in his bookImagining the King’s Death. It argues that Barrell’s book is the most significant recent work belonging to the second line of inquiry. In its second division the review responds to Barrell’s concluding discussion, in which the aesthetic consequences of the treason trials are established by means of a close reading of some of the poetry of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. The division finishes with some more general remarks on the subject of a materialist aesthetics of disengagement.

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The Author, Art, and the Market: Rereading the History of Aesthetics.Dabney Townsend - 1995 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 53 (1):85-87.
The Poverty of Theory and Other Essays.Edward P. Thompson - 1982 - Studies in Soviet Thought 24 (4):318-323.
Wordsworth's Philosophic Song.Simon Jarvis - 2006 - Cambridge University Press.

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