Satire and Sentiment, 1660-1830: Stress Points in the English Augustan Tradition

Voorkant
Yale University Press, 1 jan 2000 - 309 pagina's
This elegantly written book examines the evolution of satirical writing in the long eighteenth century--from Swift and Pope to Byron, Shelley, and Austen--and the social and cultural changes that conditioned it.

"Rawson is himself an Augustan among critics, expressing worlds of scholarship with a pungent and delightful humanism."--Donald Lyons, New Criterion

"A luxuriant hybrid of keen literary criticism and well-documented cultural history. . . . This ranging synthesis of a reeling world is mind-expanding for critics and historians, specialists and generalists."--Kenneth Craven, Scriblerian

"Rawson's book shows that there is considerable life and interest left in relatively traditional literary history."--Charles A. Knight, Eighteenth-Century Studies

"Rawson marshals an army of erudite references from Statius to Mailer to illuminate the major figures: Swift, Pope, Burke, Byron, and Shelley. His conversational style is wide-ranging in the best Augustan essay-mode."--Laura L. Runge, Albion

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Inhoudsopgave

Mockheroic and war
29
mutations of
133
SENTIMENT
163
Forms of fairsexing and other studies
199
Thomas Moores
258
Satire and sensibility
267
Index
299
Copyright

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Over de auteur (2000)

Claude Rawson is Maynard Mack Professor of English at Yale University.

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