COLERIDGE & ROMANTICISM BY DOUGLAS HEDLEY

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  • Опубликовано: 7 фев 2013
  • Complete videos are available on the St John's Timeline, which was relaunched in Autumn 2021. It comprises of over 200 full videos with improved subtitles from leading philosophers and theologians. You can subscribe for £22 (£15 concessions) per year. Institutional subscriptions are also available. stjohnstimeline.org/

Комментарии • 54

  • @user-kc5oi8wh8g
    @user-kc5oi8wh8g 11 месяцев назад +8

    Came from Cunk!

  • @frederickweinstein452
    @frederickweinstein452 Год назад +5

    Prof Hedley, you are a treasure! Thank you.

  • @dumbllama8495
    @dumbllama8495 3 года назад +16

    besides the clear and understandable content, he has the poshest accent that I've ever come across.

    • @2msvalkyrie529
      @2msvalkyrie529 2 года назад +1

      Yes. Makes a change from ghastly
      Regional accents which BBC box -
      tickers force on us !! Not sure which is worst ? Manc ? Scottish ? ....Estuary ..?

    • @jasonchambers4495
      @jasonchambers4495 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@2msvalkyrie529What a snob. And how unRomantic of you.

    • @OliverJazzz
      @OliverJazzz 6 месяцев назад +1

      I would actually pay money to hear more of him

  • @duncanhollands5218
    @duncanhollands5218 4 года назад +4

    Thank you for making such excellent material freely available.

  •  6 часов назад

    Life changing!!!

  • @adnanalamoudi
    @adnanalamoudi Год назад +3

    Thank you for sharing. This is very exceptional in ways that I cannot vocally express at this stage. Maybe one day.

  • @jacobelijah551
    @jacobelijah551 3 года назад +4

    Thank you for this analysis, it proved to be very helpful

  • @katyjaxson9359
    @katyjaxson9359 Год назад

    Please do more. I'm sorry that this is forward. I saw you in the Exodas series with Jordan Peterson and others. You are very smart, and I and I'm sure, many others would want to also learn from you. Please do not let your wisdom die with you. In great respect, Katelyn.

  • @explorerelka
    @explorerelka 27 дней назад

    i could imagine Samuel Thomas Coleridge speak in this very. accent. So, deliciously Victorian it sounds.

  • @js357s
    @js357s 6 лет назад +8

    I appreciate you taking your time in sharing your knowledge. We are in the knowledge revolution and right now quite possibly the next great artists and thinkers in what would have been in some isolated third world hovel are calling you teacher.

  • @AmidstTheLight85
    @AmidstTheLight85 10 лет назад +7

    Thank you for this fascinating introduction. Coleridge is definitely my favorite romantic.

  • @seansmith9129
    @seansmith9129 6 лет назад +9

    Coleridge was born in Ottery St Mary, where his Father was the Vicar not Nether Stowey. Though he did live for a period in Nether Stowey in later life.

  • @seansmith9129
    @seansmith9129 8 лет назад +5

    Coleridge was from Ottery St Mary in Devon.

  • @crofton82
    @crofton82 10 лет назад +3

    Excellent, Dougie Baby...

  • @nityaaa04
    @nityaaa04 Год назад

    So lit

  • @patrickdaviesjones4714
    @patrickdaviesjones4714 3 года назад +3

    Cheeky reference to TS Eliot

  • @gentillygirl545
    @gentillygirl545 3 года назад +3

    I grew up on the Romantics. They shaped my young adulthood and my ideology to this day. But do remember, none of them ever truly suffered for money. They had patrons. Many of them also had access to good drugs that are now illegal. No fault of theirs. It was a different time. Poets were like musicians and tv stars of our day. But try wandering around today spouting poetry, looking for someone to live off of, and doing a lot of drugs, and see how far that gets you. It was a brilliant time, that I wish still existed. They were highly educated, sensitive and troubled souls during a time of rapid change. Don't forget they came into fruition during the Napoleonic Era, something we could never even begin to imagine. And there were no tanks.

    • @samikhan9503
      @samikhan9503 3 года назад

      Great views.

    • @streb6
      @streb6 2 года назад

      Some lived in exile , not easy but you are right there was acceptance, bonds friendships, patronages of such loyalty and dedication.

  • @cyrusnagra3929
    @cyrusnagra3929 2 года назад

    Does anyone know the name of the painting presented @10:10 ?

  • @Kalatrobe
    @Kalatrobe 5 лет назад +1

    Nether Stowey is in Somerset, not Devon, and Coleridge lived there much later on in life, with his wife Sarah! He was born in Ottery St Mary, Devon, the youngest of 9... not including step-siblings.

  • @rogia9660
    @rogia9660 11 месяцев назад

    hello there fellow Exodus Series watcher

  • @owjanshahmiri7038
    @owjanshahmiri7038 9 месяцев назад

    What an accent ❤ I don't even know what is he talking about !

  • @mikeoyler2983
    @mikeoyler2983 Год назад

    Why only cite Wordsworth's disaffection over the Terror? Coleridge was the only one of the Romantic poets who wrote an open retraction of his previous support of the French Revolution.

  • @fhoofe3245
    @fhoofe3245 Год назад +1

    why do some people pronounce it "COL-uh-RIDGE" when it seems like the common pronunciation is 2 syllables? COLE-ridge

  • @VernCrisler
    @VernCrisler 5 лет назад +5

    For some reason I have a hard time with the idea that Lewis and Tolkien were "late Romantics." I don't believe the Fantasy genre is in the same literary space as Romantic fiction. Tolkien himself said what he was doing was called "sub-creation" -- the creation of a consistent imaginative world. I don't think the Romantics cared that much about consistency but were more in it for the feeling.

    • @keriford54
      @keriford54 4 года назад +9

      I regard them as Romantics. Neither saw their fantasy as escapism, but emphasised the truth of imagination, particularly Tolkien as did the Inkling theorist Owen Barfield. Both Lewis and Tolkien were deeply opposed to the disenchantment of the moderns, both saw a deep and true enchantment. They have strong mythic approach, Coleridge has this a little, but Keats and Shelley make more overt use of mythology. I also see George MacDonald as a link between the early Romantic and most obviously Lewis.

    • @gentillygirl545
      @gentillygirl545 3 года назад +1

      I cannot see Lewis as a Romantic. Except, perhaps, for his later innocent acceptance of God and Nature as One. But that disregards all his previous Anglican, almost agnostic argument against the sacrosanct Catholic "trinity," which basically boils down to a humanistic disbelief in the literal Transubstantiation. Regarding Tolkein, I don't see it. Coleridge went into fantasy, but it was not a building block of how to build a civilization. And true Romantic writings seemed to have more of the Utopian view, and not constant dystopian struggling.

    • @jeffreymoshe5022
      @jeffreymoshe5022 Год назад

      @@keriford54 Completely agree about MacDonald's connectivity.

    • @fhoofe3245
      @fhoofe3245 Год назад +1

      yeah, re-creating old Poetic Edda doesn't seem like 1800s Romanticism, i agree

  • @gianmarcopastore9165
    @gianmarcopastore9165 6 лет назад +1

    Ma quanto è bello Coleridge?

  • @santonino7741
    @santonino7741 4 года назад +5

    I'm a rapper and I Educate myself

    • @caronsoomers1115
      @caronsoomers1115 3 года назад +2

      Well that’s rare

    • @santonino7741
      @santonino7741 3 года назад +1

      @@caronsoomers1115 no its not

    • @caronsoomers1115
      @caronsoomers1115 3 года назад

      @@santonino7741 though it is

    • @santonino7741
      @santonino7741 3 года назад +2

      @@caronsoomers1115 jajaja Well you know the Knowledge is for those who seek for it

  • @niccolopagliai3869
    @niccolopagliai3869 6 лет назад

    eskere eskere eskereeeeeee

  • @user-mc1co5hg9n
    @user-mc1co5hg9n 6 месяцев назад

    Sir, your ahem count amounts to near zero.
    You stand atop Mount Rhetoric a hero.

  • @jo8623
    @jo8623 4 года назад +7

    Is it me, or he taks about nothing and eveything?

    • @gentillygirl545
      @gentillygirl545 3 года назад +1

      Don't deny it. The Romantics changed thought toward individual rights, the recognition of the significance of nature, subtle thinking, and the Rights of Man. It is well worth deep studying.

    • @2msvalkyrie529
      @2msvalkyrie529 2 года назад

      I think it's you ! !