Abstract

This essay reprises the scholarly conditions facing scholars a generation ago when the first attempts were made to enlarge the canonical prospect of British Romanticism and the role of J. R. deJ. (Robin) Jackson in providing the bibliographical framework that allowed for its expansion, first in terms of our knowledge of poetic texts published between 1770 and 1835 and, secondly and crucially, in restoring our awareness of the depth and variety of women's culture during this period.

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