Libertas reborn : A legend of Florence and Leigh Hunt's literary revival /
Abstract (Summary)
LIBERTAS REBORN: A LEGEND OF FLORENCE AND LEIGH HUNT’S
LITERARY REVIVAL
Adrianne Gardner Malan
Department of English
Master of Arts
According to traditional accounts, following the premature deaths of Keats,
Shelley, and Byron in the 1820s, literature in England fell into a sort of slumber until the
late 1830s and early 1840s, when a new generation—a generation we now call the
Victorians—came on the scene. Literary scholarship has tended to ignore this period of
slumber as an uninteresting gap between the two dynamic movements of Romanticism
and Victorianism. It was during this transitional period, however, that Leigh Hunt, one of
the most radical of Romantic figures, wrote and staged A Legend of Florence (1840) in an
attempt to stimulate a literary revival.
Hunt’s play reasserts the radical philosophies that defined his younger days, when
as the central figure of the “Cockney School” he had drawn other radical writers such as
Keats and Shelley into his circle. These philosophies included the primacy of literature,
political radicalism, sexual liberation, and group authorship. By writing a play in 1840
that reasserted these ideals, Hunt hoped to gather a new coterie following reminiscent of
the Cockney School. Responses to the play from Hunt’s younger Victorian
contemporaries, however, demonstrate how Hunt’s once radical “Cockney” ideals had
now become relatively safe. The nostalgic fondness with which A Legend of Florence
was greeted therefore highlights how in 1840 Romanticism was in the process of being
absorbed into Victorian philosophy and aesthetics.
Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:Brigham Young University
School Location:USA - Utah
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:hunt leigh romanticism english literature great britain
ISBN:
Date of Publication: