Coleridge and German Philosophy: The Poet in the Land of Logic
By (Author) Professor Paul Hamilton
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
1st May 2007
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900
821.7
Hardback
192
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
440g
Samuel Taylor Coleridge frequently bridged the gap between British and European Romantic thought. This studysets Coleridge's mode of thinking within a German Romantic philosophical context as the place where his ideas can naturally extend themselves, stretch and find speculations of comparable ambition. It argues that Coleridge found his philosophical adventures in the dominant idiom of his times exciting and as imaginatively engaging as poetry.
Paul Hamilton situates major themes in Coleridge's prose and poetic writings in relation to his passion for German philosophy. He argues that Coleridge's infectious attachment to German (post-Kantian) philosophy was due to its symmetries with the structure of his Christianbelief. Coleridge is read as an excited and winning expositor of this philosophy'spower to articulate an absolute grounding of reality. Its comprehensiveness, however, rendered redundant further theological description, undermining the faith it had seemed to support. Thus arose Coleridge's anxious disguising of his German plagiarisms, aspersions cast on German originality, and his claims to have already experienced their insights within his own religious sensibility or in the writings of Anglican divines and neo-Platonists. This book recovers the extent to which his ideas call to be expanded within German philosophical debate.
"A methodologically-innovative monograph, Coleridge and German Philosophy: The Poet in the Land of the Logic sets a new standard for work on Coleridge as philosopher...The deftness with which Hamilton deploys such affiliations is one of the most stimulation features of his book." -Anthony John Harding, The Wordsworth Circle, Vol. 39, Autumn 2008
Paul Hamilton is Professor of English at Queen Mary University, London. His previous books include Metaromanticism (Chicago, 2003) and Historicism 2e (Routledge, 2003).