Liberty and Poetics in Eighteenth Century England

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A01=Michael Meehan
aesthetics
Ambitious Parameters
Augustan Age
Augustan Art
Augustan Ideal
Author_Michael Meehan
British constitution
British constitutional history
Category=DSB
Civil Society
Civilized Monarchies
criticism
East Indies
eighteenth-century literary theory
English literature
Enlightenment political thought
Ennobling Interchange
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Ferguson's Essay
Ferguson’s Essay
Free State
freedom and national character in literature
Heroic
Heroic Verse
Homer
Intellectual life
Leonard Welsted
literary history
Literary Patriotism
Longinus
Loveliest Frenzy
National Spirit
political aesthetics
political freedom
political theory
Politics and literature
Prosodic Theory
Relative Politeness
Richard III
Romantic tenets
Romanticism origins
Rosco M Mon
Thomson's Liberty
Thomson’s Liberty
Vigorous Shoots
Whig
Whig historiography
Whig Polemic
World's Great Harmony
World’s Great Harmony

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367444747
  • Weight: 344g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Jan 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The qualities and achievements of eighteenth century English literature have suffered denigration as a result of a prevailing Whig interpretation of literary history. It is the contention of this book, originally published in 1986, that an alternative form of Whig interpretation is possible and even desirable. It has as its sphere of interest the ways in which views on the nature and benefits of political freedom, and various "whiggish" readings of literary history, political theory and aesthetics, did in fact shape literary and social changes through the eighteenth century. Many characteristic Romantic tenets can be seen as springing, not fully formed from the heads of their creators, but directly out of the aesthetic concerns focusing around Longinus, and the recognition of the historically singular nature of the British constitution.

This book studies and analyses the forms such concerns took in several of the central thinkers and writers of the period, and is an important contribution to the understanding of the eighteenth century milieu.

Michael Meehan

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