Written on the Water:
British Romanticism and the Maritime Empire of Culture |
| |
| Samuel Baker |
| 336 pages, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 |
| 6 b&w illustrations |
| Cloth 978-0-8139-2795-4 $49.50 |
| July 2009 |
 |
The very word “culture” has traditionally evoked the
land. But when such writers as William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor
Coleridge, Lord Byron, and, later, Matthew Arnold developed what
would become the idea of modern culture, they modeled that idea
on Britain’s imperial command of the sea. Instead of locating
the culture idea’s beginnings in the dynamic between the
country and the city, Samuel Baker insists on taking into account
the significance of water for that idea’s development. For
the Romantics, figures of the island, the deluge, and the sundering
tide often convey the insularity of cultures understood to stand
apart from the whole; yet, Baker writes, the sea also stands in
their poetry of culture as a reminder of the broader sphere of
circulation in which the poet’s work, if not the poet’s
subject, inheres.
Although other books treat the history of the idea of culture,
none synthesizes that history with the literary history of maritime
empire. Written on the Water tracks an uncanny interrelationship
between ocean imagery and culturalist rhetoric of culture forward
from the late Augustans to the mid-Victorians. In so doing, it
analyzes Wordsworth’s pronounced ambivalence toward the
sea, Coleridge’s sojourn as an imperial functionary in Malta,
Byron’s cosmopolitan seafaring tales, and Arnold’s
dual identity as “poet of water” and prose arbiter
of “culture.” It also considers Romanticism’s
classical inheritance, arguing that the Lake Poets dissolved into
the idea of culture the Virgilian system of pastoral, georgic,
and epic modes of literature and life.
This compelling new study will engage any reader interested in
the intellectual and literary history of Britain and the lived
experience of British Romanticism.
Samuel Baker is Assistant Professor of
English at the University of Texas at Austin.