Activities per year
Abstract
This essay examines a distinct shift in William Blake’s thoughts on empire, and argues that his Laocoön separate plate marks the culmination of his revised views. While Blake initially distinguished negative, commercial and tyrannical forms of empire from positive, non-tyrannical forms of empire that he conceived of as founded upon the arts, he subsequently did away with these distinctions, and came to see an irremediable link between imperial and commercial worlds. I argue that his changing views on empire must be situated against the backdrop of the empire-building of Napoleon as it relates to the appropriation of art, a backdrop that clarifies the particular focus on empire and commerce of so many of the Laocoön separate plate’s inscriptions.
Original language | English |
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Number of pages | 21 |
Journal | Romanticism and Victorianism on the Net |
Issue number | 65 |
Publication status | Published - Jun 2015 |
Keywords
- William Blake
- Empire
- Napoleon
- Commerce
- Art
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'Napoleon's Art Slaves' (Waterloo Anniversary Lecture)
Rosamund Paice (Speaker)
17 May 2015Activity: Talk or presentation types › Invited talk
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'"Empire against Art" / Art against Empire'
Rosamund Paice (Speaker)
Nov 2002Activity: Talk or presentation types › Invited talk
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'"Art Degraded Imagination Denied War Governed the Nations": William Blake's Laocoon Engraving'
Rosamund Paice (Speaker)
19 Jun 2001Activity: Talk or presentation types › Invited talk
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'Political Laocoons, Spiritual Napoleons: William Blake and the Napoleonic Art Thefts'
Rosamund Paice (Speaker)
Mar 2001Activity: Talk or presentation types › Invited talk
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The Bitter End: Apocalypse in Literature (ManuScript)
Rosamund Paice (Presented paper)
Mar 1999Activity: Participating in or organising an event types › Participation in conference