For several decades, interest in the British Romantics' theorizations
and representations of the world beyond their national borders has been
guided by postcolonial and, more recently, transatlantic paradigms.
Global Romanticism: Origins, Orientations, and Engagements, 1760-1820
charts a new intellectual course by exploring the literature and culture
of the Romantic era through the lens of long-durational globalization.
In a series of wide-ranging but complementary chapters, this provocative
collection of essays by established scholars makes the case that many
British Romantics were committed to conceptualizing their world as an
increasingly interconnected whole. In doing so, moreover, they were both
responding to and shaping early modern versions of the transnational
economic, political, sociocultural, and ecological forces known today as
globalization.