British Romanticism and Prison Reform
British Romanticism and Prison Reform is the first full-length study to explore and define the close relationship between British Romantic literary texts, on the one hand, and the birth of the modern prison, on the other, giving long overdue attention to the revolution in punishment coterminous with the age we call Romantic.
Prolific Ground
Landscape and British Women's Writing, 1690–1790
Prolific Ground investigates landownership as a crucial factor in the emergence of British women’s independence during the long eighteenth century. Staking a claim to the nation’s investment in land, women writers acquired a socio-political authority that otherwise eluded them. The landscapes that emerge in their writing testify to the socio-political power of land in this era.
Jane Austen and Masculinity
Essays in this wide-ranging collection consider representations of men and masculinity in Jane Austen’s fiction and popular adaptations of her novels. As the first volume to specifically address this topic, Jane Austen and Masculinity makes an important critical intervention, and invites further research on gender and sexuality within Austen’s corpus.
Consuming Anxieties
Alcohol, Tobacco, and Trade in British Satire, 1660-1751
Consuming Anxieties examines the varied representations of alcohol and tobacco products in literary satire from 1660-1751. Tracing the nuanced satirical treatments of these consumable items throughout the period, it considers understudied plays, poems, and essays alongside more canonical works, shedding light on critical responses to the rise of consumer culture.
The Part and the Whole in Early American Literature, Print Culture, and Art
This collection maps the significance of fragmentary forms in early American literature and culture from the mid-seventeenth to mid-nineteenth century. The Part and the Whole recovers the distinct aesthetics of the incomplete, retelling the story of American culture by reorienting our collective understanding toward texts and objects that have often been critically ignored.
Women and Music in the Age of Austen
Teaching the Eighteenth Century Now
Pedagogy as Ethical Engagement
Published by Bucknell University Press. Distributed worldwide by Rutgers University Press.
Louis Sébastien Mercier
Revolution and Reform in Eighteenth-Century Paris
Reading Smell in Eighteenth-Century Fiction
Alimentary Orientalism
Britain’s Literary Imagination and the Edible East
Thomas Holcroft’s Revolutionary Drama
Reception and Afterlives
Families of the Heart
Surrogate Relations in the Eighteenth-Century British Novel
Families of the Heart introduces surrogate families as a new literary device for analyzing a set of novels by Defoe, Richardson, Haywood, and Burney. This radical convention with its feminist and egalitarian potential, Campbell argues, allowed female protagonists to navigate the social world before and beyond marriage across the long eighteenth century.
Eighteenth-Century Environmental Humanities
Political Affairs of the Heart
Female Travel Writers, the Sentimental Travelogue, and Revolution, 1775-1800
The Limits of Familiarity
Authorship and Romantic Readers
Robinson Crusoe after 300 Years
This wide-ranging collection brings together eleven scholars who suggest new and unfamiliar ways of thinking about the 1719 publications The Life and Strange Surprizing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe and The Farther Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, and who ask us to consider the enduring appeal of “Crusoe,” more recognizable today than ever before.
Transatlantic Women Travelers, 1688-1843
This collection examines images of late seventeenth- through mid-nineteenth-century transatlantic women travelers in historical and literary works. The volume features women of a variety of races, ethnicities, and social classes traveling in all directions of the Atlantic Ocean, as well as the people they encounter in their travels and residences.
Transatlantic Women Travelers, 1688-1843
This collection examines images of late seventeenth- through mid-nineteenth-century transatlantic women travelers in historical and literary works. The volume features women of a variety of races, ethnicities, and social classes traveling in all directions of the Atlantic Ocean, as well as the people they encounter in their travels and residences.
Laurence Sterne’s A Sentimental Journey
A Legacy to the World
Laurence Sterne's A Sentimental Journey
A Legacy to the World
Hemispheres and Stratospheres
The Idea and Experience of Distance in the International Enlightenment
Hemispheres and Stratospheres offers eight essays that address the art, literature, science, and politics of distance during the long eighteenth century. This volume celebrates the intercontinental expansiveness of Enlightenment distance culture—a culture that continues to encourage modern pursuits such as space travel, tourism, telecommunication, multiculturalism, and international research collaboration.
Hemispheres and Stratospheres
The Idea and Experience of Distance in the International Enlightenment
Hemispheres and Stratospheres offers eight essays that address the art, literature, science, and politics of distance during the long eighteenth century. This volume celebrates the intercontinental expansiveness of Enlightenment distance culture—a culture that continues to encourage modern pursuits such as space travel, tourism, telecommunication, multiculturalism, and international research collaboration.
Rewriting Crusoe
The Robinsonade across Languages, Cultures, and Media
Narrative Mourning
Death and Its Relics in the Eighteenth-Century British Novel
Lothario's Corpse
Libertine Drama and the Long-Running Restoration, 1700-1832
Lothario’s Corpse explores the persistent appeal of Restoration libertine drama (and its absolutist heroes and scenarios of lawless license) in the century following its supposed disappearance from the British stage. Tracing the stage libertine’s haunting of post-1688 culture, Gustafson illustrates how its literary and political manifestations document a fantasy of sovereign power at the heart of the emergent liberal imagination.
Romantic Automata
Exhibitions, Figures, Organisms
Beside the Bard
Scottish Lowland Poetry in the Age of Burns
The Novel Stage
Narrative Form from the Restoration to Jane Austen
The Imprisoned Traveler
Joseph Forsyth and Napoleon's Italy
The Printed Reader
Gender, Quixotism, and Textual Bodies in Eighteenth-Century Britain
Novel Bodies
Disability and Sexuality in Eighteenth-Century British Literature
Fire on the Water
Sailors, Slaves, and Insurrection in Early American Literature, 1789-1886
The Global Wordsworth
Romanticism Out of Place
Intelligent Souls?
Feminist Orientalism in Eighteenth-Century English Literature
Cultivating Peace
The Virgilian Georgic in English, 1650-1750
Jane Austen and Comedy
Community and Solitude
New Essays on Johnson’s Circle
Goldsmith, Bennet Langton, Arthur Murphy, Richard Savage, Anna Seward, and Thomas Warton—and analyzes some of the literary productions emanating from the pressures within
those relationships.