a stimulating and erudite contribution to and critique of what we might call the Habermasian turn in Romantic studies.
Graham Allen, English
a fascinating exploration and analysis of a variety of writers through the lens of their conversational ideals and practices and the manifold ways in which they deployed them. It thus provides a rich and challenging contribution to the cultural and literary history of the long eighteenth century. Mee's meticulous research and his impressive range of periodical, magazine, and newspaper sources will also make this study invaluable for students and researchers alike.
Michèle Cohen, 1650-1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries in the Early Modern Era
Luxuriating in intellectual complexity, Mee's account is impressive, exhaustive, and at times dazzling. His willingness not only to examine but also to embrace conversation as a "combative tradition" is refreshing ... Mee has brought to the conversation something very significant indeed.
Kimberly J. Stern, Review 19
This is an invaluable and provocative contribution not just to eighteenth-century and Romantic-period studies, but to on-going debates surrounding the public sphere and sociability from the Enlightenment period right through to the present.
Helen O'Connell, Review of English Studies