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- Title: Daniel E. White. Early Romanticism and Religious Dissent (Book Review)
- Author : Studies in Romanticism
- Release Date : January 22, 2009
- Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines,Books,Professional & Technical,Education,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 179 KB
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Daniel E. White. Early Romanticism and Religious Dissent. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006. Pp. xiii+266. $90.00. Daniel E. White's epigraph from Anna Barbauld's An Address to the Opposers of the Repeal of the Corporation and Test Acts (1790), which translates the stubborn fortune of religious dissenters' political marginalization or "opprobrious separation" into an empowering exile, seems to relocate British romanticism to the outskirts of the forest of Arden. Just as the unjustly usurped Duke in As You Like It predicts that "the uses of adversity" will be "sweet" in woods "more free from peril than the envious court" (11.i), Barbauld contrasts the morality of nonconformists' academies, the elegance of their literature, and the productivity of their commercial ventures with the Establishment's corrupt and stagnant counterparts. Accordingly, Britain's true cultural identity and progressive vitality should be sought not in Westminster, but in Warrington, the trading town in Northwest England that was the site of the most famous Dissenting academy. By taking his reader deep into such discourses and contexts, White joins the burgeoning study of religion in the romantic period by figures such as Mark Canuel, Martin Priestman, and Robert Ryan. To this recovery, White adds unprecedented specificity--what he calls the "particularity" of his readings of Barbauld's Arminian-Arian inflected Presbyterianism, William Godwin's roots in ultra-Calvinistic Sandemanianism, S. T. Coleridge's restless Socinianism, and Robert Southey's early attraction to Quakerism (4)--that constitutes the strength of this book and that will refine future considerations of familiar issues such as Coleridge's ambivalent 1790s relationship with Unitarian belief and political action. Early Romanticism and Religious Dissent, however, should not be mistaken for an interesting but ultimately marginal cultural history of theological hair-splitting. Rather, White engages central tropes of Romanticism explored by M. H. Abrams or Rene Wellek--reuniting the "individual with nature," supplementing the "analytical gaps of Enlightenment reason," and expressing the "autonomous mind in the unified work of art" (16)--but insists that they unfolded amid the liturgical, communal, and moral "creeds and practices" (16) of late-eighteenth-century "public religion" (2)--terra incognita for those venerable critics. What insight comes from a reconsideration of the way Dissenting communities not only "energized and molded" but indeed "impelled the genesis of Romanticism" in England? (1) Resisting a nostalgic reading of "pre-apostasy" romanticism as radically revolutionary, White instead sympathetically recaptures a moment when Dissenting culture provided, albeit imperfectly and briefly, a mediating or middle ground of intelligent and ethical expression and debate within the broader republic of letters.