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William Godwin’s History of the Commonwealth and the Psychology of Individual History
Author(s)
Date Issued
01 April 2010
Date Available
15T16:14:43Z July 2020
Abstract
William Godwin's History of the Commonwealth of England (1824-28) is usually considered solely in relation to its representation of the English Revolution and Civil War, and its engagement or otherwise with various religious and constitutional controversies. Yet Godwin's History also has much to tell us about the complicated ambiguities of the shift from Enlightenment to Romantic historiography, as well as about the tensions between classical, philosophical and sentimental modes of historical representation that this shift entailed. This article therefore focuses more on the rhetoric and form of Godwin's representation of the English national past than on the History's ideological content, although the two spheres inevitably overlap. As a species of composition not inherently distinct or isolated from his other historical endeavours, the History is considered alongside Godwin's historical biographies and novels; in particular, it is argued that techniques drawn from these para- and quasi-historical genres, combined with classical methodologies such as pen-portraits and orations, imbue the text with a new and distinctly psychological approach to the past, which differs both from the aims of philosophic history and from the so-called 'Romantic' or picturesque narratives of early Victorian histories by Carlyle and Macaulay.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Journal
Review of English Studies
Volume
61
Issue
252
Start Page
773
End Page
800
Copyright (Published Version)
2010 the Author
Keywords
Subject – LCSH
Godwin, William, 1756-1836
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0034-6551
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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