Book contents
- Percy Shelley for Our Times
- Reviews
- Percy Shelley for Our Times
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Shelley, Treaty-Making, and Indigenous Poetry
- 2 Waiting for the Revolution
- 3 “A Chamæleonic Race”
- 4 Dream Defenders and the Inside Songs
- 5 Radical Suffering
- 6 Loathsome Sympathy
- 7 Hopeless Romanticism
- 8 Percy Shelley’s Sad Exile
- 9 Shelley in the Overgrowth
- 10 Creatrix Witches, Nonbinary Creatures, and Shelleyan Transmedia
- 11 Action at a Distance
- 12 Educating the Imagination/Defending Shelley Defending
- Further Reading
- Index
3 - “A Chamæleonic Race”
Shelley and the Discourses of Slavery
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 March 2024
- Percy Shelley for Our Times
- Reviews
- Percy Shelley for Our Times
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Shelley, Treaty-Making, and Indigenous Poetry
- 2 Waiting for the Revolution
- 3 “A Chamæleonic Race”
- 4 Dream Defenders and the Inside Songs
- 5 Radical Suffering
- 6 Loathsome Sympathy
- 7 Hopeless Romanticism
- 8 Percy Shelley’s Sad Exile
- 9 Shelley in the Overgrowth
- 10 Creatrix Witches, Nonbinary Creatures, and Shelleyan Transmedia
- 11 Action at a Distance
- 12 Educating the Imagination/Defending Shelley Defending
- Further Reading
- Index
Summary
Shelley believed that poetry transcends the moral precepts of its time to present ethical truths that are eternally valid. Yet he was also committed to the power of poetry to effect political change in its present. This chapter approaches the latent contradiction between timelessness and contemporaneity through the figure of “chameleonism.” Shelley mentions the concept in a letter about Adonais, where he suggests that poets are “a very chamæleonic race: they take the colour not only of what they feed on, but of the very leaves under which they pass.” The formulation suggests a form of inadvertent intertextuality: the poet’s work is colored by other writings whether he intends to or not. The chapter explores how Shelley’s poetry takes its color from discourses surrounding the enslavement of Africans in Britain’s overseas colonies. While Shelley was not purposefully intervening in debates around abolition or the scientific codification of “race,” his writings reflect the anti-Black ideological horizon of his time. Looking at a number of his works, including Adonais, The Cenci, Hellas, and the translation of Plato’s Symposium, the chapter also historicizes the relationship between criticism and ethics: are we entitled to judge Shelley’s racial attitudes with the standards of our time?
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- Percy Shelley for Our Times , pp. 63 - 84Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024