Prophetic legislation : William Blake and the visionary poetry of the law
This dissertation examines the meaning of law in Blake's work. I argue that Blake's poetry intersects with contemporaneous challenges to the traditional model of the ancient constitution, a debate which I present as a conflict between custom and code. Blake's support for the French Re...
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ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-4147072019-02-27T03:17:04ZProphetic legislation : William Blake and the visionary poetry of the lawMauger, Matthew2005This dissertation examines the meaning of law in Blake's work. I argue that Blake's poetry intersects with contemporaneous challenges to the traditional model of the ancient constitution, a debate which I present as a conflict between custom and code. Blake's support for the French Revolution's overthrow of the customary systems of the ancien regime is countered by his nervousness about the rights-based discourse advanced by leading radical intellectuals such as Thomas Paine, a belief that the new systems which they proposed merely re-stated those which they sought to replace within an even narrower compass. Law is also a contested ground within radical political discourse of this period; although the dominant proposals advocated the enshrinement of fundamental rights and the codification of law, there was also a tendency towards a more enthusiastic radicalism These millenarian groups, emerging from antinomian heresy, rejected the notion of life being framed within a set of moral laws. I argue that Blake cannot easily be placed in either group; his work exhibits a fidelity to the redemptive potential of law, coupled with a real concern that to define freedoms in legal terms serves to limit rather than to liberate. Blake's work thus engages with a problem of the period: how to understand the new discourses of law. The customary account of the ancient English conunon law is predicated on the idea that it is codified, yet not written down; secular, though grounded in divine principle. These ambivalences are exploited by Blake in his poetic exploration of the law in the 1790s. In his nineteenth-century epics, Blake finds increasing help in dissenting religion's reconstruction of a radicalized Jesus. Through this radical prophetic voice, Blake is able to construct a redemptive legality founded on a deinstitutio-nalized Christianity, a constitutionalism that is also recovered from the conventional customary account.821.7English LiteratureQueen Mary, University of Londonhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.414707http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/1818Electronic Thesis or Dissertation |
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821.7 English Literature |
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821.7 English Literature Mauger, Matthew Prophetic legislation : William Blake and the visionary poetry of the law |
description |
This dissertation examines the meaning of law in Blake's work. I argue that Blake's poetry intersects with contemporaneous challenges to the traditional model of the ancient constitution, a debate which I present as a conflict between custom and code. Blake's support for the French Revolution's overthrow of the customary systems of the ancien regime is countered by his nervousness about the rights-based discourse advanced by leading radical intellectuals such as Thomas Paine, a belief that the new systems which they proposed merely re-stated those which they sought to replace within an even narrower compass. Law is also a contested ground within radical political discourse of this period; although the dominant proposals advocated the enshrinement of fundamental rights and the codification of law, there was also a tendency towards a more enthusiastic radicalism These millenarian groups, emerging from antinomian heresy, rejected the notion of life being framed within a set of moral laws. I argue that Blake cannot easily be placed in either group; his work exhibits a fidelity to the redemptive potential of law, coupled with a real concern that to define freedoms in legal terms serves to limit rather than to liberate. Blake's work thus engages with a problem of the period: how to understand the new discourses of law. The customary account of the ancient English conunon law is predicated on the idea that it is codified, yet not written down; secular, though grounded in divine principle. These ambivalences are exploited by Blake in his poetic exploration of the law in the 1790s. In his nineteenth-century epics, Blake finds increasing help in dissenting religion's reconstruction of a radicalized Jesus. Through this radical prophetic voice, Blake is able to construct a redemptive legality founded on a deinstitutio-nalized Christianity, a constitutionalism that is also recovered from the conventional customary account. |
author |
Mauger, Matthew |
author_facet |
Mauger, Matthew |
author_sort |
Mauger, Matthew |
title |
Prophetic legislation : William Blake and the visionary poetry of the law |
title_short |
Prophetic legislation : William Blake and the visionary poetry of the law |
title_full |
Prophetic legislation : William Blake and the visionary poetry of the law |
title_fullStr |
Prophetic legislation : William Blake and the visionary poetry of the law |
title_full_unstemmed |
Prophetic legislation : William Blake and the visionary poetry of the law |
title_sort |
prophetic legislation : william blake and the visionary poetry of the law |
publisher |
Queen Mary, University of London |
publishDate |
2005 |
url |
https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.414707 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT maugermatthew propheticlegislationwilliamblakeandthevisionarypoetryofthelaw |
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1718983697943756800 |