Science and Sensation in Romantic Poetry

Science and Sensation in Romantic Poetry book cover

Science and Sensation in Romantic Poetry

Author(s): Noel Jackson (Author)

  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press
  • Publication Date: April 21, 2008
  • Edition: 1st
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 288 pages
  • ISBN-10: 0521869374
  • ISBN-13: 9780521869379

Book Description

Romantic poets, notably Wordsworth, Blake, Coleridge and Keats, were deeply interested in how perception and sensory experience operate, and in the connections between sense-perception and aesthetic experience. Noel Jackson tracks this preoccupation through the Romantic period and beyond, both in relation to late eighteenth-century human sciences, and in the context of momentous social transformations in the period of the French Revolution. Combining close readings of the poems with interdisciplinary research into the history of the human sciences, Noel Jackson sheds light on Romantic efforts to define how art is experienced in relation to the newly emerging sciences of the mind and shows the continued relevance of these ideas to our own habits of cultural and historical criticism today. This book will be of interest not only to scholars of Romanticism, but also to those interested in the intellectual interrelations between literature and science.

Editorial Reviews

Review

Noel Jackson, in his outstanding Science and Sensation in Romantic Poetry, answers the questions that ‘The Affective Fallacy’ leaves hanging and does so by resorting to romantic forebears: why did matters of feeling and perception press so strongly on scientists, politicians and poets at this historical juncture and, more searchingly, what larger implications – and legacies – are entailed when we ask poetry to ‘make us feel?’…The mutual emergence and co-implication of romantic poetics and romantic-era science of the nervous system serve to anchor Jackson’s analysis. His remarkable archival work and theoretical sophistication are marshaled around a series of organizing terms: suggestion, autonomy, common sense, and consent (or consensus). All these terms, Jackson shows convincingly, are implicated in the period understanding of what it is to feel and make feel. –Mary Favret, “The Study of Affect and Romanticism,” Literature Compass 6 (2009) (added by author)

Positioned between phenomenological and materialist approaches, Noel Jackson’s Science and Sensation in Romantic Poetry stresses Romanticism’s language of embodied sensual experience and re-establishes its crucial ties to eighteenth-century empirical philosophy’s effort to delineate how the mind and the emotions function…In chapters on William Wordsworth, Coleridge, and Keats, Jackson argues that writing is a “suggestive practice” through which chiefly political ideas may be communicated to other subjects (p. 49); that Coleridgean lyric, affiliated with the analytic orientation of eighteenth-century common sense philosophy, joins self-expression and self-observation to dramatize self-consciousness as suspended between the subject speaking and the subject being observed; and that Keats’s familiarity with early brain theory enables an aesthetic practice in which the sensuous and the abstract, like the mind and the nervous system, are mutually dependent…[An] impressive study. –Dianne F. Sadoff and John Kucich, Recent Studies in the Nineteenth Century, SEL (Autumn 2009) (added by author)

Book Description

An investigation into the competing impulses of science and literary experience in the poetry of Wordsworth, Blake, Coleridge and Keats.

About the Author

Noel Jackson is Associate Professor of Literature at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. (edited by author)

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