Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 248
Trim: 6 x 9¼
978-0-7425-1161-3 • Hardback • December 2000 • $173.00 • (£135.00)
978-0-7425-1162-0 • Paperback • December 2000 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
Jonathan David Gross is associate professor of English at DePaul University. He is the editor of Byron's 'Corbeau Blanc': The Life and Letters of Elizabeth Milbanke, Lady Melbourne (1997).
Chapter 1 Byron: The Erotic Liberal
Chapter 2 Byron's Politics of Feeling
Chapter 3 Byron's Politics of Sentimentalism
Chapter 4 Byron and the Story of Joseph: The Bride of Abydos, Hebrew Melodies, and Don Juan
Chapter 5 Cosmopolitan Liberalism: Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, III, and De L'Allemagne
Chapter 6 "Get[ting] into Lord's Ground": Byron's Aristocratic Liberalism in the Pope-Bowles Controversy and Marino Faliero
Chapter 7 "One Half of What I Should Say": Byron's Gay Narrator in Don Juan
Chapter 8 The Liberal as Periodical and Political Posture
Chapter 9 "Still Let Me Love!": Byron in Greece
Chapter 10 Byron and the Liberal Imagination in America
Byron's politics are so complicated that few have even attempted to write book-length studies about them, and Gross should be commended for even trying to take on such a bewildering complex set of issues. We emerge from his book full of insights and questions about the meaning of the term 'liberal' and the ways it might be nuanced by one's erotic vitality.
— James Soderholm, Baylor University
Byron: The Erotic Liberal is a keen biographical and critical account of Byron's politics of feeling. In such chapters as that on the narrator of Don Juan as homoerotic, Gross provokes and persuades.
— Carl Woodring, Columbia University
Jonathan Gross demonstrates a sound knowledge of historical contexts, cultural codes, and Byron scholarship.
— Studies In Romanticism
This book is a significant contribution to Byron studies. Gross is well informed in the social and political details of Byron's English milieu, but he is also well prepared to read Byron's career as erotic liberal through the lens of contemporary gay studies and through the biblical story of Joseph. His ability to see connections between Byron and contemporary American liberalism is ingenious.
— Peter Graham, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University