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E-raamat: Reading Sympathy in Romantic Literature

(University of Warwick)
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When two people read together, what do they stand to learn not just about the book, but about each other? Representations of people reading together in Romantic literature often describe the act of sharing a book as a kind of litmus test of sympathy. Frequently, however, fictional readers end up misreading the text, or each other, or both. Stacey McDowell shows how Romantic writers, in questioning the assumptions lying behind the metaphorical sense of reading as sympathy, reflect on ideas of reading its private or social nature and its capacity to foster fellow feeling while also suggesting something about the literary qualities intrinsic to sympathy itself its hermeneutic, narrative, and rhetorical strategies. She reveals what the literary portrayal of shared reading adds to histories of the book and moral philosophy, and how the effects of form and style aim to reproduce the shared experience of reading described.

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An incisive exploration of how Romantics understood shared reading, providing new insight for histories of the book and moral philosophy.
Introduction: reading minds;
1. Complicit reading: Hunt, Byron, and
Dante's Paolo and Francesca;
2. Goethe's grammar of intimacy;
3.
Wollstonecraft and Godwin, loving by the book;
4. Lamb's reading blunders;
5.
Keats's interreading; Conclusion: reading together apart; Bibliography.
Stacey McDowell is an Assistant Professor in English and Comparative Literary Studies at Warwick University.