When Victorians read Romantic-period writings, they were not usually reading Romantic-period books. Instead, they mostly encountered Romantic writing in new editions, which supplied existing works with a new bibliographical format. These new editions often included illustrations. — Timothy Mole, What the Victorians Made of Romanticism (2018)
General
- “Bite-sized chunks of culture”: How Anthologies reshaped Victorian ideas of Romantic poetry
- Poetry, Public Monuments, and Postcards — a review of Timothy Mole’s What the Victorians Made of Romanticism
Romanticism, Religion, and Philosophy
- Emotionalist Moral Philsophy and the Origins of Romanticism
- Evangelicalism — Romantic Religion
- Timeline of English Philosophy and Religion
- Comteian Positivism
Psychological, Moral, and Aesthetic Theory
- Sublimity: An Introduction
- Nature Dwarfs Humanity: the Sublimity of Size and Scale
- Alexander Gerard and the Sublimity of Size
- Sublimity as Subjective Experience
- Edmund Burke
- William Wordsworth
- J. M. W. Turner
Poets and Novelists
- William Blake (no material)
- George Gordon, Lord Byron
- William Cowper (no material)
- Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- John Keats
- Sir Walter Scott
- P. B. Shelley
- Charlotte Smith
- William Wordsworth
Novelists and Writers of Prose
- Jane Austen
- Fanny Burney
- Thomas de Quincey
- Isaac D’Israeli
- Harriet Martineau
- Anne Radcliffe
- Sir Walter Scott
- Mary Shelley
- Mary Wollstonecraft
Political Contexts
- A Timeline of British History
- The Anti-Slavery Campaign in Britain
- Corn Laws
- Reform Acts: An Introduction
- Tory and Whig
- Prime Ministers
- The British Empire and International Relations
Social History
- Public Health
- Conditions of Life and Labor
- Race, Class, and Gender Issues
Pre-Nineteenth History Political History
Web Resources
Incorporated in the Victorian Web July 2000
Last modified 15 February 2019