This essay presents an argument for the constructive relationship between Byron and Leigh Hunt in their shared conception and publication of The Liberal within a progressive framework of Mediterranean cultural hybridity. Although traditional accounts of the Byron–Hunt dynamic within The Liberal have emphasised a toxic interaction largely responsible for the journal’s perceived ‘failure’, more recent studies have proposed their more effective political and creative interaction in planning and producing the journal. However, these valuable recuperative analyses still tend to track the collaboration of Byron and Hunt on The Liberal in a declining trajectory, particularly after the first two issues, that eventuates in the termination of the journal. My essay extends these recent studies by exploring a more continuously fruitful partnership between Byron and Hunt, with notable limits, throughout the entire run of The Liberal . That more sustained collaboration can be seen to coalesce in the effective advancement throughout The Liberal ’s four issues of a politically progressive aesthetic grounded in a fundamental affirmation of the intermixed hybridity of diverse Mediterranean cultures, races, ethnicities, religions, and identity formations – a ‘Mediterranean Miscellaneousness’.
Greg Kucich (Mon,) studied this question.