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chapter
posted on 2024-03-12, 16:07authored byIan Packer, Lynda Pratt
<p>Robert Southey (1774-1843) was a prolific writer and a key figure in British cultural life in the early-nineteenth-century. One aspect of his significance was the central role that he played as an interpreter of Spanish and Portuguese politics, society and literature to a British audience. This essay examines two neglected aspects of Southey's engagement with the Iberian peninsular - his writings in the Edinburgh Annual Register and his unfinished series of inscriptions on the Peninsular war - in order to reach a fuller understanding of Southey's view of developments in Iberia and how these impacted on his politics and his sense of his public role.</p>
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