The Augustan VisionFirst 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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begins one a empt by an eminent s olar to dislodge 'Augustanism' from literary currency.2 Everybody's books date in the end; but poor Saintsbury seems to be dying from the head downwards, with his very tide-page most perishable of all ...
begins one a empt by an eminent s olar to dislodge 'Augustanism' from literary currency.2 Everybody's books date in the end; but poor Saintsbury seems to be dying from the head downwards, with his very tide-page most perishable of all ...
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Yet the term seems peculiarly apt to the period of English culture and society treated here, 1688 to 1760. It was a time when the influential Society for the Reformation of Manners sprang up: a local association, founded in Tower ...
Yet the term seems peculiarly apt to the period of English culture and society treated here, 1688 to 1760. It was a time when the influential Society for the Reformation of Manners sprang up: a local association, founded in Tower ...
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Pleasures of the Imagination | |
e Dress of ought | |
Communications | |
Drama | |
Satire and the Moral Essay | |
e Satiric Inheritance | |
Swi | |
Pope | |
Gay and Scriblerian Comedy | |
Dr Johnson | |
The Novel 21 Origins of an Art Form | |
Roles and Identities | |
Books and Readers | |
Men Women and | |
Undercurrents | |
Poetry Drama Letters 11 Turn of the Century | |
e Widening Vista | |
Sensibility | |
e LeerWriters | |
Defoe | |
Riardson | |
Fielding | |
Sterne and Smolle | |
Notes and References | |
Reading List | |
Index | |
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