The Romantic Rhetoric of Accumulation provides an account of the long arc of dispossession from the British Romantic period to today. Lenora Hanson glimpses histories of subsistence (such as reproductive labor, vagrancy and criminality, and unwaged labor) as figural ways of living that are superfluous--simultaneously more than enough to live and less than what is necessary for capitalism.
Hanson treats rhetorical language as an archive of capital's accumulation through dispossession, in works by S.T. Coleridge, Edmund Burke, Mary Robinson, William Wordsworth, Benjamin Moseley, Joseph Priestley, and Alexander von Humboldt, as well as in contemporary film and critical theory. Reading riots through apostrophe, enclosure through anachronism, superstition and witchcraft through tautology, and the paradoxical coincidence of subsistence living with industrialization, Hanson shows the figural to be a material record of the survival of non-capitalist forms of life within capitalism. But this survival is not always-already resistant to capitalism, nor are the origins of capital accumulation confined to the Romantic past. Hanson reveals rhetorical figure as entwined in deeply ambivalent ways with the circuitous, ongoing process of dispossession.
Reading both historically and rhetorically, Hanson argues that rhetorical language records histories of dispossession and the racialized, gendered distribution of the labor of subsistence. Romanticism, they show, is more contemporary than ever.
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"Enough is a peculiar concept, at once defined by satisfaction and haunted by never." New in review: Carmen Faye Mathes reviews Lenora Hanson's The Romantic Rhetoric of Accumulation, from @stanfordpress: https://t.co/BrVFAexN7e https://t.co/LBH4JsquFe
methodologies of the wrong apocalypse
A week from today (April 18), Maureen McLane and I will be talking with Lenora Hanson about their incredible new book *The Romantic Rhetoric of Accumulation* (in person at NYU and online) https://t.co/2kYX451G7l https://t.co/dLDQ19Zg9A