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Deception and Detection in Eighteenth-Century Britain
Deception and Detection in Eighteenth-Century Britain
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A01=Jack Lynch
authenticity debates
Author_Jack Lynch
BL Add
British Enlightenment thought
canning
Category=DNXC
Category=DS
Category=DSB
cultural memory studies
De Foe
De Mendacio
edmond
Egypt's Middle Kingdom
Egypt’s Middle Kingdom
Eighteenth Century Print Culture
eighteenth-century fraud analysis
elizabeth
Epistemic Probability
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
evidence evaluation
External Consistency
Foreign Corruptions
forgery controversies
Full Text Electronic Databases
Galic Antiquities
historical epistemology
ireland
John Locke1
Johnsonian Miscellanies
Judicial Evidence
Linguistic Anachronism
Lockean Faculty
malone
ossianic
Ossianic Poems
poems
Posterior Facts
Richard III
Rowley Poems
samuel
Samuel Ireland
Scottish Customs
Sebald De Weert
Silly Young Man
works
yale
Yale Works
Young Man
Product details
- ISBN 9781138261945
- Weight: 440g
- Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
- Publication Date: 11 Nov 2016
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Paperback
In the first extended treatment of the debates surrounding public deception in eighteenth-century Britain, Jack Lynch contends that forgery, fakery, and fraud make explicit the usually unspoken grounds on which Britons made sense of their world. Confrontations with inauthenticity, in other words, bring tacitly understood conceptions of reality to the surface. Drawing on a wide range of contemporary print and manuscript sources”not only books and pamphlets, but ballads, comic prints, legal proceedings, letters, and diaries”Lynch focuses on the debates they provoked, rather than the forgers themselves. He offers a comprehensive treatment of the criticism surrounding fraud in most of the noteworthy controversies of the long eighteenth century. To this end, his study is structured around topics related to the arguments over deception in Britain, whether they concerned George Psalmanazar's Formosan hoax at the beginning of the eighteenth century or William Henry Ireland's Shakespearean imposture at the end. Beginning with the question of what constitutes deception and ending with an illuminating chapter on what was at stake in these debates for eighteenth-century British thinkers, Lynch's accessibly written study takes the reader through the means”whether simple, sophisticated, or tortuously argued”by which partisans on both sides struggled to define which of the apparent contradictions were sufficient to disqualify a claim to authenticity. Fakery, Lynch persuasively argues, transports us to the heart of eighteenth-century notions of the value of evidence, of the mechanisms of perception and memory, of the relationship between art and life, of historicism, and of human motivation.
Jack Lynch is Associate Professor of English at Rutgers-Newark, The State University New Jersey, USA.
Deception and Detection in Eighteenth-Century Britain
€72.99
