Description
Trade Review"[A] useful book. . . . Risinger's explanations of the importance of Stoicism in the period's literature make a valuable contribution to the literature of the Romantic period." * Choice Reviews *
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Stoic Romanticism and the Ethics of Emotion is a sustained and sensitive engagement with a range of literary work that shows the nuances of changing perspectives in a changing world. It is no small feat that virtually every sentence is a triumph of craftsmanship, or that the text reads with a confidence and ease found usually in the most seasoned critics."
---Denise Gigante, Nineteenth-Century Literature"With elegant readings that work against the grain of the consistent and determinate, Risinger remind us that writers like Wordsworth and Wollstonecraft were not simply subject over time to shifting political views, but, in the space of a single poem or essay, under the heady influence of diffuse competing aesthetic and ethical commitments."
---Samantha Botz, European Romantic Review"
Stoic Romanticism and the Ethics of Emotion is an excellent study. Erudite, eloquent, and critically expert, it is all the more remarkable for being a first book. . . . Risinger has blazed a bright trail into Stoic Romanticism in England and America."
---Adam Potkay, The Wordsworth Circle"Erudite and elegantly argued. . . . So utterly effective is Risinger at showing that ‘Romantic Stoicism is a corollary of the period’s “gravitational pull toward feeling” rather than a blinkered rejection of that force’ . . . that one is left wondering, as with any fine book, how this never occurred to anyone until now."
---Julie Murray, Eighteenth-Century Fiction