TY - JOUR
T1 - Re-enactment and Romanticism
T2 - Wordsworth, Southey, and R.G. Collingwood’s An Autobiography (1939)
AU - Duggett, Tom
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Edinburgh University Press.
PY - 2025/7/17
Y1 - 2025/7/17
N2 - Wordsworth called The Prelude ‘the history of a Poet’s mind’. But what, this essay asks, is the weight of the word ‘history’ here? Does a poem ‘enshrining… the spirit of the Past/For future restoration’ match R.G. Collingwood’s demanding mid-twentieth-century account of history as ‘re-enactment’, the present rethinking of past thought? Myself repeating Alan Liu’s thought experiment with re-enactment in a series of suggestive footnotes in Wordsworth: The Sense of History (1989), I attempt here to (re)forge a Wordsworth-Collingwood connection, reviving – at least prospectively – one abandoned Romantic new historicist itinerary. Asking both how far Wordsworth contributes to this genealogy of historicism, and what may be gained for understanding Collingwood’s An Autobiography (1939) by attending to the encapsulation of the Lake Poets within it, this essay proposes re-enactment – as influential and controversial as ever – as a key concept for literary history of the humane, imaginative kind.
AB - Wordsworth called The Prelude ‘the history of a Poet’s mind’. But what, this essay asks, is the weight of the word ‘history’ here? Does a poem ‘enshrining… the spirit of the Past/For future restoration’ match R.G. Collingwood’s demanding mid-twentieth-century account of history as ‘re-enactment’, the present rethinking of past thought? Myself repeating Alan Liu’s thought experiment with re-enactment in a series of suggestive footnotes in Wordsworth: The Sense of History (1989), I attempt here to (re)forge a Wordsworth-Collingwood connection, reviving – at least prospectively – one abandoned Romantic new historicist itinerary. Asking both how far Wordsworth contributes to this genealogy of historicism, and what may be gained for understanding Collingwood’s An Autobiography (1939) by attending to the encapsulation of the Lake Poets within it, this essay proposes re-enactment – as influential and controversial as ever – as a key concept for literary history of the humane, imaginative kind.
KW - Collingwood
KW - history
KW - memory
KW - re-enactment
KW - Southey
KW - Wordsworth
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105013597794
U2 - 10.3366/rom.2025.0689
DO - 10.3366/rom.2025.0689
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105013597794
SN - 1354-991X
VL - 31
SP - 197
EP - 213
JO - Romanticism
JF - Romanticism
IS - 2
M1 - 8
ER -