A Cockney Catullus: The Reception of Catullus in Romantic Britain, 1795-1821

Author:   Henry Stead (Leverhulme Early Career Research Fellow, AHRC Post-doctoral Research Associate, King's College London)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780198744887


Pages:   368
Publication Date:   05 November 2015
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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A Cockney Catullus: The Reception of Catullus in Romantic Britain, 1795-1821


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Overview

Catullus, one of the most Hellenizing, scandalous, and emotionally expressive of the Roman poets, burst onto the British cultural scene during the Romantic era. It was not until this socially, politically, and culturally explosive epoch, with its mania for all things Greek, that Catullus' work was first fully translated into English and played a key role in the countercultural and commercially driven classicism of the time. Previously marginalized on the traditional eighteenth-century curriculum as a charming but debauched minor love poet, Catullus was discovered as a major poetic voice in the late Georgian era by reformist emulators-especially in the so-called Cockney School-and won widespread respect. In this volume, Henry Stead pioneers a new way of understanding the key role Catullus played in shaping Romanticism by examining major literary engagements with Catullus, from John Nott of Bristol's pioneering book-length bilingual edition (1795), to George Lamb's polished verse translation (1821). He identifies the influence of Catullus' poetry in the work of numerous Romantic-era literary and political figures, including Byron, Keats, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Hunt, Canning, Brougham, and Gifford, demonstrating the degree of its cultural penetration.

Full Product Details

Author:   Henry Stead (Leverhulme Early Career Research Fellow, AHRC Post-doctoral Research Associate, King's College London)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.40cm , Height: 2.60cm , Length: 22.20cm
Weight:   0.578kg
ISBN:  

9780198744887


ISBN 10:   0198744889
Pages:   368
Publication Date:   05 November 2015
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements ; List of Illustrations ; List of Abbreviations ; Select Timeline of Catullan Engagement ; Introduction ; 1. Catullus Unchained: The Translations of John Nott & George Lamb ; 2. Catullus 64 in Translation and Allusion ; i. Translating 64: C.A. Elton and Frank Sayers ; ii. Symbolic Allusion: T.L. Peacock, Leigh Hunt, and Keats ; 3. Non-Cockney Responses to Catullus ; i. W.S. Landor, Wordsworth, Thomas Moore, and Lord Byron ; ii. The Anti-Jacobinical Catullus ; 4. Catullus The Reformer: Leigh Hunt's Reception ; 5. Keats's Catullan Samphire ; Conclusion ; Appendix ; Select Bibliography ; Index

Reviews

[Henry Stead] has assembled a fascinating history of the diverse receptions of Catullus in an age of polarised politics and high anxiety because of events on the continent ... Stead is a perceptive guide to these turbulent times. His style is not encumbered by a reliance on jargon, but manages to be both academic and accessible. Alan Beale, Classics for All With sensitive critical alertness and in an engaging post-ironic style warmed with a generous measure of the 'cheer' and sociality he imputes to the best Cockney readers he studies, Stead tells an important story about how Catullus came to look the way he looks now. It is a story that will interest classicists, comparatists, and translation theorists as well as literary historians. David Wray, The BARS Review


lively and illuminating ... Although naturally of interest to students of Catullus, of his receptions in British literature and of Romanticism, this monograph will richly reward students of Latin poetry and classical receptions more generally. * Benjamin Eldon Stevens, Classical Review * Stead is a commendably unsqueamish guide ... I look forward to future work on Romanticism and Latinity from Stead because his fine, detailed knowledge of the classical canon should enable him to provide scholars of the period with insights available to few others. * Andrew Elfenbein, Modern Philology * With sensitive critical alertness and in an engaging post-ironic style warmed with a generous measure of the 'cheer' and sociality he imputes to the best Cockney readers he studies, Stead tells an important story about how Catullus came to look the way he looks now. It is a story that will interest classicists, comparatists, and translation theorists as well as literary historians. * David Wray, The BARS Review * [Henry Stead] has assembled a fascinating history of the diverse receptions of Catullus in an age of polarised politics and high anxiety because of events on the continent ... Stead is a perceptive guide to these turbulent times. His style is not encumbered by a reliance on jargon, but manages to be both academic and accessible. * Alan Beale, Classics for All * a rich and diverse collection of responses to Catullus from an important and clearly defined period in British literary history ... A Cockney Catullus is an important and impressive achievement. * Timothy Saunders, Translation and Literature * For many readers of Romantic poetry and their classical colleagues, this detailed study will provide an opportunity to reconsider in unfamiliar contexts a variety of Romantic poems and translations, and also to explore the largely unexpected emergence of Catullus in England during that period. * Timothy Webb, The Keats-Shelley Review *


With sensitive critical alertness and in an engaging post-ironic style warmed with a generous measure of the 'cheer' and sociality he imputes to the best Cockney readers he studies, Stead tells an important story about how Catullus came to look the way he looks now. It is a story that will interest classicists, comparatists, and translation theorists as well as literary historians. * David Wray, The BARS Review * [Henry Stead] has assembled a fascinating history of the diverse receptions of Catullus in an age of polarised politics and high anxiety because of events on the continent ... Stead is a perceptive guide to these turbulent times. His style is not encumbered by a reliance on jargon, but manages to be both academic and accessible. * Alan Beale, Classics for All *


[Henry Stead] has assembled a fascinating history of the diverse receptions of Catullus in an age of polarised politics and high anxiety because of events on the continent ... Stead is a perceptive guide to these turbulent times. His style is not encumbered by a reliance on jargon, but manages to be both academic and accessible. Alan Beale, Classics for All


Author Information

Henry Stead is a Leverhulme Early Career Research Fellow working within the field of classical reception studies at the Open University (English and Classical Studies).

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