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Romantic Media and Wartime Networks
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01 September 2026

This book tells the story of how Britain revolutionized its state communication networks on an unprecedented scale during the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars, setting the stage for our modern infrastructure state where connectivity and surveillance go hand in hand. Deven Parker argues that Romantic literary representations of this state communications network managed to reveal—and, on occasion, to resist—its ideological functions.
In a wide-ranging study drawing upon an archive of military surveys, spy reports, trial records, and even ladies' hand fans, Parker reveals the scope and impact of the British government's investments in shutter telegraphs, mapping projects, and postal routes across two decades of war with France. The writers of the Romantic period, meanwhile, were cognizant of the political motivations undergirding the state's overhauled networks, which were designed to facilitate and speed up but also to more easily control communications. Taking up familiar writers including Lord Byron, Mary Wollstonecraft, William Godwin, Charlotte Smith, Charles Lamb, William Hazlitt, and Thomas De Quincey—as well as lesser-known figures such as radical playwright John Dent, inventor Richard Lovell Edgeworth, and the proto-science fiction novelist Jane Loudon—Parker reads Romantic literature for its astute chronicling and interrogation of the material hardware of the state's media ecology.
"Romantic Media and Wartime Networks is a timely, scholarly and important contribution to media history. It is very well written, intellectually agile and highly readable. Rich in detail and inventive in scope."—Kate Thomas, Bryn Mawr College
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Revolutions in Communication
1. Surveilling the Post: Epistolary Evidence and the Jacobin Novel
2. Signal Failure: Neutralizing the Optical Telegraph
3. Poetic Topographies: Mapping the Peninsular Wars
4. Precarious Correspondence: Packet Networks in the Napoleonic Era
Notes
Bibliography
Index