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The Connected Condition

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The Romantic poet's intense yearning to share thoughts and feelings often finds expression in a style that thwarts a connection with readers. Yohei Igarashi addresses this paradox by reimagining Ro...
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  • 10 December 2019
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The Romantic poet's intense yearning to share thoughts and feelings often finds expression in a style that thwarts a connection with readers. Yohei Igarashi addresses this paradox by reimagining Romantic poetry as a response to the beginnings of the information age. Data collection, rampant connectivity, and efficient communication became powerful social norms during this period. The Connected Condition argues that poets responded to these developments by probing the underlying fantasy: the perfect transfer of thoughts, feelings, and information, along with media that might make such communication possible.

This book radically reframes major poets and canonical poems. Igarashi considers Samuel Taylor Coleridge as a stenographer, William Wordsworth as a bureaucrat, Percy Shelley amid social networks, and John Keats in relation to telegraphy, revealing a shared attraction and skepticism toward the dream of communication. Bringing to bear a singular combination of media studies, the history of communication, sociology, rhetoric, and literary history, The Connected Condition proposes new accounts of literary difficulty and Romanticism. Above all, this book shows that the Romantic poets have much to teach us about living with the connected condition and the fortunes of literature in it.

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Price: $65.00
Pages: 256
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Series: Stanford Text Technologies
Publication Date: 10 December 2019
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503610040
Format: Hardcover
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"The Connected Condition is a brilliant, nuanced, and elegantly written work on media as concept and practice in the Romantic period. Writing about the 'dream of communication,' Yohei Igarashi restages through intriguing research and deft theoretical argument what earlier generations of Romanticists hallowed as imagination."—Alan Liu, University of California, Santa Barbara
Yohei Igarashi is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Connecticut.
Introduction: The Dream of Communication
1. Scribble-Scrabble Genius: Coleridge, Transcription, and the Shorthand Effect
2. Wordsworth and Bureaucratic Form
3. Shelley amid the Age of Separations; or, a Poetry of Ambiversion for Networked Life
4. Keats's Ways: The Dark Passages of Mediation and Giving Up Hyperion
Conclusion: Communication and Literary Competence, Anew