Varia:Mary Robinson’s Lyrical Tales (1800): The Horrors of Alienation, War, Slavery and Social Segregation
Varia:Mary Robinson’s Lyrical Tales (1800): The Horrors of Alienation, War, Slavery and Social Segregation
Author(s): Rayna RosenovaSubject(s): Language and Literature Studies, Literary Texts, Poetry, Theoretical Linguistics, Studies of Literature, Comparative Linguistics, American Literature
Published by: Великотърновски университет „Св. св. Кирил и Методий”
Keywords: Gothic; sublime; alienation; warfare; slavery; power relations; marginalization; oppression; society
Summary/Abstract: The article discusses a selection of poems from Mary Robinson’s Lyrical Tales (1800), offering a close reading to show how Robinson engaged with pertinent historical issues, such as slavery, war and power relations, that marked the last decade of the eighteenth century. It explores Robinson’s use of Gothic and sublime aesthetics to communicate the ruptures found in society and to represent various states of otherness. In the poems under discussion, the Gothic is used to externalize both psychological and social collapse, communicating the sense of instability, vulnerability, alienation, anxiety, and fragmentation. Robinson’s use of Gothic conventions creates a gloomy atmosphere which seeks to accentuate the ills of eighteenth-century British politics and society and to engage the reader sympathetically.
Journal: VTU Review: Studies in the Humanities and Social Sciences
- Issue Year: 4/2020
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 91-103
- Page Count: 13
- Language: English