Confessions of an English Opium-Eater

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Broadview Press, Feb 23, 2009 - Fiction - 368 pages

Confessions of an English Opium-Eater remains its author’s most famous and frequently-read work and one of the period’s central statements about both the power and terror of imagination. De Quincey describes the intense “pleasures” and harrowing “pains” of his opium use in lyrical and dramatic prose. A notorious success since its 1821 publication, the work has been an important influence on philosophers, theorists, and psychologists, as well as literary writers, of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. But Confessions is only one part of a larger confessional project conceived by De Quincey over the course of his writing career. Gathered together in this edition, these texts provide a fascinating glimpse of early nineteenth-century British aesthetic, medical, psychological, political, philosophical, social, racial, national, and imperialist attitudes.

This edition includes the 1821 text of Confessions, its important sequel Suspiria de Profundis (1845), and its sequel, The English Mail-Coach (1849), as well as extensive appendices.

 

Contents

Acknowledgements
8
Introduction
9
A Brief Chronology
45
A Note on the Text
48
CONFESSIONS OF AN ENGLISH OPIUMEATER
49
Related Texts and Prefaces
284
Reviews Letters Notes
307
The Opium Question History and Politics
327

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About the author (2009)

Joel Faflak is Associate Professor of English at the University of Western Ontario.

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