The Poetics of Spice: Romantic Consumerism and the ExoticTimothy Morton explores the significance of spice, and the spice trade, in Romantic literature, shedding new light on the impact of a growing consumer culture and capitalist ideology on writers of the period. The Poetics of Spice includes discussion of a wide range of related topics--exoticism, orientalism, colonialism, the slave trade, race and gender issues, and, above all, capitalism. The book surveys literary, political, medical, travel, trade and philosophical texts, and includes new readings of Milton, Coleridge, Keats, Shelley, Leigh Hunt, Charlotte Smith and Southey among many others. |
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Page 2
... Imagining the Body , which became Shelley and the Revolution in Taste , was about purity , abstention , anti - capitalism , guilt and redemption narratives and anxiety about the disfigurative qualities of language . I fantasised about a ...
... Imagining the Body , which became Shelley and the Revolution in Taste , was about purity , abstention , anti - capitalism , guilt and redemption narratives and anxiety about the disfigurative qualities of language . I fantasised about a ...
Page 6
... imagining the circulating liquidity of capitalism . Even when ostensibly anti - capi- talist poets such as Percy Shelley picked up the pen , they had the poetics of spice available to them in just this way . The book then explores the ...
... imagining the circulating liquidity of capitalism . Even when ostensibly anti - capi- talist poets such as Percy Shelley picked up the pen , they had the poetics of spice available to them in just this way . The book then explores the ...
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Common terms and phrases
aesthetic ambient Apicius appears associated Blackmore blood sugar body Braudel capitalism capitalist ideology cinnamon Coleridge Coleridge's colonialism commodity consumer consumerism consumption Cookery culture describes discourse discussion East economic eighteenth century ekphrastic English enjoyment Eve of St evokes exotic fantasy feminised fetish figurative language flavour flow fragrant gender Ibid imagined imperial India Indies Jean Baptiste Tavernier Keats Keats's literary literature London Lusiads luxury medieval merchants Milton mode modern myth narrative nature notion object objet petit odours oneiric horizon Orient Paradise Lost pepper Percy Shelley perfume pharmakon play poem poet poetics of spice poetry political Purchas Queen Mab realm relationship representation of spice rhetoric rich role Romantic period Romanticism scent sense Shelley's significant slavery smell Song sonnet Southey space Spice Islands spice trade spicy St Agnes stanza substance supplement sweet taste things tion trade winds transumptive tree tropological vegetarian William Žižek