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The context of Frankenstein » Literary context » The Romantics: Coleridge, Lamb, Southey, de Quincey

Background

Romanticism is the name given to a dominant movement in literature and the other arts – particularly music and painting – in the the period from the 1770s to the mid-nineteenth century:

Reaction to earlier age

Like many other literary movements, it developed in reaction to the dominant style of the preceding period:

Main features

Central features of Romanticism include:

Who were the Romantics?

Links with Mary Shelley

In English Literature, it denotes a period between 1785-1830, when the previous classical or enlightenment traditions and values were overthrown, and a freer, more individual mode of writing emerged.
(1775-1850) He was born in the Lake District and was one of the leading Romantic poets.
(1772-1834) Samuel Taylor Coleridge was a poet, critic and philosopher and as a close friend of William Wordsworth was associated with the earliest phase of poetic Romanticism.
Byron, George Gordon (1788-1824) was one of the leading Romantic poets whose scandalous personal life brought him as much notoriety as his poetry brought him fame.