The Talk of the Tap-Room: Bloomfield, Politics and Popular Culture
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This article takes as its point of departure Bloomfield's repeated and insistent claim that he was a poet, not a politician. Drawing on the fascinating, recently published correspondence of Bloomfield and his circle, it examines how the dissociation of poetry and politics in the post-revolutionary decades affected the poet's public and private identities. In the first instance, the article explores how the ideology of natural genius exerted pressure on Bloomfield and other labouring-class poets to think about poetry as a cultural form which was incompatible with the public sphere of politics, especially the combative world of artisan radicalism. But the article also shows that the polarisation of political culture in the aftermath of the French Revolution debate had the effect of politicising even the most private aspects of Bloomfield's life and literary productions. Much to the poet's profound vexation, his public persona was appropriated by radicals, liberals and loyalists alike, depriving him of the privacy the theory of natural genius assumed he should embrace.
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Romantic Circles Praxis Series
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2012
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January
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© The Author(s) 2012. The attached file is reproduced here in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. For information about this journal please refer to the journal’s website or contact the author.
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British and Irish Literature
British History