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Palgrave Macmillan

The Palgrave Literary Dictionary of Samuel Taylor Coleridge

  • Book
  • © 2022

Overview

  • Provides a detailed, easy to use reference guide to Coleridge's life and works
  • Covers Coleridge's verse and prose
  • Serves as an excellent jumping off point for further research into Coleridge's work

Part of the book series: Palgrave Literary Dictionaries (PAZ)

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Table of contents (1 chapter)

Keywords

About this book

This volume explores ‘the labyrinth of what we call Coleridge’ (Virginia Woolf): his poems and prose, their sources, interpretation and reception; his life, troubled marriage and fatherhood, conversation, changing intellectual contexts and legacy. Major entries cover such canonical works as The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Christabel, ‘Kubla Khan’, the ‘conversation poems’ and Biographia Literaria. But a fuller understanding of Coleridge must embrace many lesser-known poems – lyrics, satire, comical squibs. The prose – critical, philosophical, political, religious – ranges from his early radical writings to the more conservative On the Constitution of the Church and State, his influential Shakespeare lectures, and the vast resource of the notebooks. Coleridge read widely throughout his life and engaged extensively with the work of, among many others, Milton, Fielding, Berkeley, Priestley, Kant, Schelling. One of his most important relationships was with William Wordsworth. Another was with Sara Hutchinson. Entries trace Coleridge’s changing reputation, from brilliant young activist to the ‘Sage of Highgate’ to the later apostle of the theories of the imagination and of Practical Criticism. Other topics covered include opium, plagiarism, the French Revolution, Pantisocracy, Unitarianism, and the Salutation and Cat tavern.

Authors and Affiliations

  • Independent Scholar, Cambridge, UK

    Martin Garrett

About the author

Martin Garrett is an independent writer. He has contributed to the Palgrave Literary Dictionaries series as the author of The Palgrave Literary Dictionary of Byron (2010, joint winner of the Elma Dangerfield Prize of the International Association of Byron Societies for 2011), The Palgrave Literary Dictionary of Shelley (2013) and The Palgrave Literary Dictionary of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley (2019). His other work on Romanticism includes, for Palgrave, A Romantics Chronology, 1780-1832 (2016, winner of the 2017 CILIP Knowledge and Information Management Information Resources Award) and, for the British Library Writers' Lives series, volumes on Byron, Mary Shelley and the Brownings. He has also worked on Beowulf; Renaissance literature and drama; and cultural and literary guides to Greece, Italy, Provence, the Loire, Oxford and Cambridge.

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