Journal article 1024 views
Monstrous Combinations of horrors and mockery? Southey, Catholicism and the Gothic
Romanticism, Volume: 17, Issue: 1, Pages: 25 - 38
Swansea University Author:
Caroline Franklin
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DOI (Published version): 10.3366/rom.2011.0005
Abstract
This article explores Robert Southey's ambivalence towards Roman Catholicism as expressed in his unjustly-neglected Gothic ballads, many of which used black humour to mock the pre-Reformation Church's corruption and greed. It argues that although he was an unashamed Anglican polemicist Sou...
Published in: | Romanticism |
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ISSN: | 1354-991X |
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Romanticism
2011
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa11428 |
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2018-02-09T04:41:03Z |
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2013-10-15T17:31:11.6290663 v2 11428 2012-06-14 Monstrous Combinations of horrors and mockery? Southey, Catholicism and the Gothic 173cbc669e8031bf38c1c0498e060dbf 0000-0001-6545-4984 Caroline Franklin Caroline Franklin true false 2012-06-14 This article explores Robert Southey's ambivalence towards Roman Catholicism as expressed in his unjustly-neglected Gothic ballads, many of which used black humour to mock the pre-Reformation Church's corruption and greed. It argues that although he was an unashamed Anglican polemicist Southey's venomous mimicry of Catholic beliefs in his ballads unconsciously channelled a sense of loss for the vitality of irrational and magical aspect of religion then being discarded by Enlightenment Protestants. Paradoxically Southey's poetry, both these popular Gothic ballads sold on the streets and his scholarly verse romances featuring Islamic and Hindu belief in the supernatural, directly inspired Cardinal Newman and many others: helping to instigate the medievalism of the Oxford movement. This of course brought about the revival of the old religion both within and without the Anglican Church. Journal Article Romanticism 17 1 25 38 Romanticism 1354-991X Robert Southey, Gothic, Roman Catholicism, ballads 31 12 2011 2011-12-31 10.3366/rom.2011.0005 http://www.euppublishing.com/doi/abs/10.3366/rom.2011.0005 COLLEGE NANME COLLEGE CODE Swansea University 2013-10-15T17:31:11.6290663 2012-06-14T15:38:35.8813223 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Culture and Communication - English Language, Tesol, Applied Linguistics Caroline Franklin 0000-0001-6545-4984 1 |
title |
Monstrous Combinations of horrors and mockery? Southey, Catholicism and the Gothic |
spellingShingle |
Monstrous Combinations of horrors and mockery? Southey, Catholicism and the Gothic Caroline Franklin |
title_short |
Monstrous Combinations of horrors and mockery? Southey, Catholicism and the Gothic |
title_full |
Monstrous Combinations of horrors and mockery? Southey, Catholicism and the Gothic |
title_fullStr |
Monstrous Combinations of horrors and mockery? Southey, Catholicism and the Gothic |
title_full_unstemmed |
Monstrous Combinations of horrors and mockery? Southey, Catholicism and the Gothic |
title_sort |
Monstrous Combinations of horrors and mockery? Southey, Catholicism and the Gothic |
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173cbc669e8031bf38c1c0498e060dbf |
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173cbc669e8031bf38c1c0498e060dbf_***_Caroline Franklin |
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Caroline Franklin |
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Caroline Franklin |
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Journal article |
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Romanticism |
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17 |
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25 |
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2011 |
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Swansea University |
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1354-991X |
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10.3366/rom.2011.0005 |
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Romanticism |
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Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences |
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Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences |
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Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences |
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http://www.euppublishing.com/doi/abs/10.3366/rom.2011.0005 |
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description |
This article explores Robert Southey's ambivalence towards Roman Catholicism as expressed in his unjustly-neglected Gothic ballads, many of which used black humour to mock the pre-Reformation Church's corruption and greed. It argues that although he was an unashamed Anglican polemicist Southey's venomous mimicry of Catholic beliefs in his ballads unconsciously channelled a sense of loss for the vitality of irrational and magical aspect of religion then being discarded by Enlightenment Protestants. Paradoxically Southey's poetry, both these popular Gothic ballads sold on the streets and his scholarly verse romances featuring Islamic and Hindu belief in the supernatural, directly inspired Cardinal Newman and many others: helping to instigate the medievalism of the Oxford movement. This of course brought about the revival of the old religion both within and without the Anglican Church. |
published_date |
2011-12-31T06:32:04Z |
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1827818464627130368 |
score |
11.056294 |