The Augustan VisionRoutledge, 2021年12月24日 - 328 頁 First published in 1974, The Augustan Vision looks at the entire spectacle of Augustan Society in an attempt to see English culture as a whole and thus gain greater insight into this critical period in English Literature. Later parts of the book explore poetry, drama, and aesthetics; that distinctive expression of the age, satire, where abuse is made into art, and the moral essay; and finally, the emerging novel, the crucial new form of this period. This is a must read for students and researchers of English literature. |
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... Letters 11 Turn of the Century 12 The Widening Vista 13 Sensibility 14 The Letter-Writers 15 Drama Part III Parables of Society: Satire and the Moral Essay 16 The Satiric Inheritance 17 Swift 18 Pope 19 Gay and Scriblerian Comedy 20 Dr ...
... Letters 11 Turn of the Century 12 The Widening Vista 13 Sensibility 14 The Letter-Writers 15 Drama Part III Parables of Society: Satire and the Moral Essay 16 The Satiric Inheritance 17 Swift 18 Pope 19 Gay and Scriblerian Comedy 20 Dr ...
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... letters. Lesser punishments, headed by transportation, were reserved for such comparatively venial offences as petty larcenies of a shilling or less, ripping lead, and bigamy. Coiners might still be burnt at Tyburn; merely to be present ...
... letters. Lesser punishments, headed by transportation, were reserved for such comparatively venial offences as petty larcenies of a shilling or less, ripping lead, and bigamy. Coiners might still be burnt at Tyburn; merely to be present ...
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... letters; and second, that this critical orthodoxy had obvious bearings on writing as it was actually produced. Our initial reaction might be to regret the imaginative limitations supposedly implicit in such a doctrine. It is obvious ...
... letters; and second, that this critical orthodoxy had obvious bearings on writing as it was actually produced. Our initial reaction might be to regret the imaginative limitations supposedly implicit in such a doctrine. It is obvious ...
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... letters best of all. His career was that of an intellectual adventurer; his story a classic Grub Street epic, and his literary productions - as with Defoe - had to take second place in a varied life of political espionage, penury and ...
... letters best of all. His career was that of an intellectual adventurer; his story a classic Grub Street epic, and his literary productions - as with Defoe - had to take second place in a varied life of political espionage, penury and ...
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內容
Pleasures of the Imagination | |
The Dress of Thought | |
Communications | |
Drama | |
Satire and the Moral Essay | |
The Satiric Inheritance | |
Swift | |
Pope | |
Gay and Scriblerian Comedy | |
Dr Johnson | |
The Novel | |
Roles and Identities | |
Books and Readers | |
Men Women and | |
Undercurrents | |
Poetry Drama Letters | |
Turn of the Century | |
The Widening Vista | |
Sensibility | |
The LetterWriters | |
Origins of an Art Form | |
Defoe | |
Richardson | |
Fielding | |
Sterne and Smollett | |
Notes and References | |
Reading List | |
Index | |
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常見字詞
achieved Addison admired aesthetic allegory artistic Augustan Beggar's Opera career century character Chesterfield Cibber Clarissa Colley Cibber comedy comic contemporary course criticism Crusoe culture Defoe Defoe's dramatic Dryden Dunciad eighteenth eighteenth-century England English Epistle Essay fact feeling fiction Fielding Fielding's Grongar Hill Gulliver Henry Fielding hero highwayman Hogarth Horace Walpole Humphry Clinker Ian Watt ideas imaginative important interest invention Jacobite rising John Johnson Jonathan Wild kind language later less letters literary literature living Locke London Lord mode moral narrative narrator Nash natural Newton novel Opera Pamela patron period play poem poet poetic poetry political Pope Pope's prose published reader Richardson satire scene Scriblerian sense Shamela Shandy Smollett social society sort Sterne style Swift taste theme things Thomson Tom Jones trade tragedy Tristram Tristram Shandy verse Walpole Whig whilst women writer wrote