{"title":"Series: Liverpool English Texts and Studies","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cstrong\u003eLiverpool English Texts and Studies\u003c\/strong\u003e offers a diverse array of works spanning philosophy, history, finance, and beyond, inviting readers into thoughtful explorations across multiple disciplines. This collection balances rigorous scholarship with accessible narratives, making complex ideas and specialized topics engaging and approachable.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\n\u003cp\u003eFrom insightful reflections on psychology and economics to journeys through travel and technological expertise, the series appeals to curious minds eager to expand their understanding. Whether delving into historical perspectives or practical guides in health and business, readers will find texts that challenge, inform, and inspire.\u003c\/p\u003e","products":[{"product_id":"fantastic-shapes-topology-and-textuality-in-romantic-poetry-by-richard-marggraf-turley-9781805965848","title":"Fantastic Shapes: Topology and Textuality in Romantic Poetry","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"book-description\"\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eAn exciting topological foray into Romantic textuality, \u003cem\u003eFantastic Shapes\u003c\/em\u003e shows how poetic form participates in a broader reimagining of space and spatial relations at the turn of the nineteenth century. It reveals how the textual surface, far from being a passive carrier wave of content, emerges as an active, shaping force: a dynamic, self-reflexive site of meaning-making.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\n\u003cp\u003eFocusing on four poets – John Keats, Charlotte Smith, Percy Shelley and Felicia Hemans – the book engages with developments in non-Euclidean geometry to argue that far-reaching reconceptualizations of space not only form the backdrop to Romanticism’s challenge to classical order, but come to constitute that very challenge.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\n\u003cp\u003eThis book’s wider aim is to offer fresh perspectives on key Romantic signatures: irony, fragmentation, non-orientability, recursion, and spatial paradox. These formal tendencies, Richard Marggraf-Turley argues, are not merely aesthetic or rhetorical effects but expressions of a deeper epistemic rupture – one that unfolds against a mathematical revolution that was testing, and ultimately disrupting, the constraints of Euclidean spatial logic.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Unknown","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":47397843075308,"sku":"9781805965848","price":401.0,"currency_code":"NZD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0705\/7784\/8556\/files\/ed114014d2f007467416f0d4fc53d23a.jpg?v=1773778064"}],"url":"https:\/\/bookhero.co.nz\/collections\/series-liverpool-english-texts-and-studies.oembed","provider":"Book Hero","version":"1.0","type":"link"}