Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Brian Goldberg is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Brian Goldberg.


Nineteenth-Century Literature | 2016

Debt, taxes, and reform in Walter Scott's Count Robert of Paris

Brian Goldberg

Brian Goldberg, “Debt, Taxes, and Reform in Walter Scott’s Count Robert of Paris” (pp. 343–368) Walter Scott’s Count Robert of Paris (1831) treats “debt” in a way determined by the author’s response to the Reform Crisis of 1830–1832. Scott’s solution to the reformist impulse was the reintroduction of the income tax. He believed that an income tax would give the nation’s elites an opportunity to acknowledge their duties and contribute their fair share toward the payment of the national war debt, thus stabilizing the economy and eliminating a crucial motive for reform legislation. Count Robert of Paris reimagines this solution by translating the nation’s relationship to government debt into a system of personal indebtedness. While the novel’s main characters, the Anglo-Saxon mercenary Hereward and the Crusader Count Robert, assume their roles in a working hierarchy through the assumption and discharge of debt, these developments take place in a dystopian fictional world that reflects Scott’s apprehensions about reform. In Count Robert’s late-eleventh-century Constantinople, leaders evade responsibility, justice is inscrutable or impossible to achieve, and the city is populated by Crusaders and Byzantines who are unwilling or unable to recognize or pay what they owe.


ELH | 1996

Romantic Professionalism in 1800: Robert Southey, Herbert Croft, and the Letters and Legacy of Thomas Chatterton

Brian Goldberg


Archive | 2007

The lake poets and professional identity

Brian Goldberg


Studies in Romanticism | 1997

'Ministry More Palpable’: William Wordsworth and the Making of Romantic Professionalism

Brian Goldberg


Mathematical Logic Quarterly | 1998

‘A Sea Reflecting Love’: Tennyson, Shelley, and the Aesthetics of the Image in the Marketplace

Brian Goldberg


Journal for Eighteenth-century Studies | 2018

Thomas Chatterton and Neglected Genius, 1760-1830. By Daniel Cook. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. 2013. xv + 259 p. £58 (hb). ISBN 978-1-137-33248-6. £55 (pb). ISBN 978-1-349-46176-9.

Brian Goldberg


The European Legacy | 2016

Writing Romanticism: Charlotte Smith and William Wordsworth, 1784–1807

Brian Goldberg


The European Legacy | 2015

Love’s Vision

Brian Goldberg


Archive | 2015

Wordsworth as Professional Author

Brian Goldberg


The European Legacy | 2011

Review of Enlightening Romanticism, Romancing the Enlightenment: British Novels from 1750 to 1832 ed. Miriam L. Wallace

Brian Goldberg

Collaboration


Dive into the Brian Goldberg's collaboration.

Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge