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Full Description
An exploration of an essential but often overlooked figure in English literature
In this innovative biography, Andrew Keanie explores one of the most enigmatic figures in English Romanticism. Known for his confessional prose and essays, De Quincey is more than the author of Confessions of an English Opium-Eater —he is the hidden thread connecting the great minds of the Romantic movement, including William Wordsworth, Dorothy Wordsworth, and Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
Rather than a traditional cradle-to-grave account, The Life of the Author offers a thematic approach, focusing on key moments and works that defined De Quincey's intellectual life. Through his personal struggles with addiction, loss, and identity, De Quincey forged a new style of life writing that intertwined personal experience with universal truths, influencing generations of writers to come. Throughout the book, Keanie invites readers to reconsider one of English literature's most complex figures and the Romantic movement he helped define.
Accessible to academic readers and literary enthusiasts alike, The Life of the Author: Thomas De Quincey is a must-read for anyone looking for a concise yet deeply insightful book that sheds new light on how De Quincey's life shaped the enduring legacy of Romanticism.
Contents
Acknowledgements xi
Research Sources xiii
Abbreviations xv
Preface xvii
The Recent Biographies xxvii
1 Roots 1
2 Finding the Romantics 5
3 Founding Romanticism 8
4 Conditions of an English Poetry Reader 12
5 Into the Depths: William Wordsworth's Prelude 24
6 Death, Dreams and the Far East 43
7 We Are Britain 55
8 As Headstrong as an Allegory on the Banks of the Thames 80
9 Suspiria via Xenophobia 88
10 The Irish Question and Some Shapeshifting 100
11 Murder Most Preludial: Macbeth 114
12 Murder Most Metaphorical: Liquidating a Rival Life-Writer 119
13 Confessions of a Self-Justified Stylist 130
14 Conditions of an English Counterculture 138
15 Conditions of an English Leg-Puller 153
Conclusion: Suspiria De Quincey (Sighs from the Depths of English Romanticism) 169
Bibliography 177
Index 183