In this important and innovative study Jon Klancher shows how the Romantic age produced a new discourse of the ''Arts and Sciences'' by reconfiguring the Enlightenment''s idea of knowledge and by creating new kinds of cultural institutions with unprecedented public impact. He investigates the work of poets lecturers moral philosophers scientists and literary critics - including Coleridge Godwin Bentham Davy Wordsworth Robinson Shelley and Hunt - and traces their response to book collectors and bibliographers art-and-science administrators painters engravers natural philosophers radical journalists editors and reviewers. Taking a historical and cross-disciplinary approach he opens up Romantic literary and critical writing to transformations in the history of science history of the book art history and the little-known history of arts-and-sciences administration that linked early-modern projects to nineteenth- and twentieth-century modes of organizing ''knowledges''. His conclusions transform the ways we think about knowledge both in the Romantic period and in our own.
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