Description

Book Synopsis

Enlightenment-era writers had not yet come to take technology for granted, but nonetheless were—as we are today—both attracted to and repelled by its potential. This volume registers the deep history of such ambivalence, examining technology’s influence on Enlightenment British literature, as well as the impact of literature on conceptions of, attitudes toward, and implementations of technology. Offering a counterbalance to the abundance of studies on literature and science in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Britain, this volume’s focus encompasses approaches to literary history that help us understand technologies like the steam engine and the telegraph along with representations of technology in literature such as the “political machine.” Contributors ultimately show how literature across genres provided important sites for Enlightenment readers to recognize themselves as “chimeras”—“hybrids of machine and organism”—and to explore the modern self as “a creature of social reality as well as a creature of fiction.”



Table of Contents
Introduction
Kristin M. Girten and Aaron R. Hanlon
Chapter 1: Webster’s Baroque Experiments and the Testing of Technology in the Early 1600s
Laura Francis
Chapter 2: Telling Time in the Fiction of Mary Hearne and Daniel Defoe
Erik L. Johnson
Chapter 3: The Technology and Theatricality of Three Hours after Marriage’s “Touch-Stone of Virginity”
Thomas A. Oldham
Chapter 4: Gulliver’s Travels, Automation, and the Reckoning Author
Zachary M. Mann
Chapter 5: Designing the Enlightenment Anthropocene
Kevin MacDonnell
Chapter 6: Technology, Temporality, and Queer Form in Horace Walpole’s Gothic
Emily M. West
Chapter 7: Telegraphic Supremacy in Maria Edgeworth’s “Lame Jervas”
Deven M. Parker
Chapter 8: Percy Shelley, Political Machines, and the Pre-History of the Post-Liberal
Jamison Kantor
Afterword: On the Uses of the History of Technology for Literary Studies and Vice Versa
Joseph Drury
Bibliography
Notes on Contributors
Index

British Literature and Technology, 1600-1830

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    A Hardback by Kristin M. Girten, Aaron R. Hanlon, Kristin M. Girten

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      Publisher: Bucknell University Press,U.S.
      Publication Date: 13/01/2023
      ISBN13: 9781684483969, 978-1684483969
      ISBN10: 1684483964

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Enlightenment-era writers had not yet come to take technology for granted, but nonetheless were—as we are today—both attracted to and repelled by its potential. This volume registers the deep history of such ambivalence, examining technology’s influence on Enlightenment British literature, as well as the impact of literature on conceptions of, attitudes toward, and implementations of technology. Offering a counterbalance to the abundance of studies on literature and science in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Britain, this volume’s focus encompasses approaches to literary history that help us understand technologies like the steam engine and the telegraph along with representations of technology in literature such as the “political machine.” Contributors ultimately show how literature across genres provided important sites for Enlightenment readers to recognize themselves as “chimeras”—“hybrids of machine and organism”—and to explore the modern self as “a creature of social reality as well as a creature of fiction.”



      Table of Contents
      Introduction
      Kristin M. Girten and Aaron R. Hanlon
      Chapter 1: Webster’s Baroque Experiments and the Testing of Technology in the Early 1600s
      Laura Francis
      Chapter 2: Telling Time in the Fiction of Mary Hearne and Daniel Defoe
      Erik L. Johnson
      Chapter 3: The Technology and Theatricality of Three Hours after Marriage’s “Touch-Stone of Virginity”
      Thomas A. Oldham
      Chapter 4: Gulliver’s Travels, Automation, and the Reckoning Author
      Zachary M. Mann
      Chapter 5: Designing the Enlightenment Anthropocene
      Kevin MacDonnell
      Chapter 6: Technology, Temporality, and Queer Form in Horace Walpole’s Gothic
      Emily M. West
      Chapter 7: Telegraphic Supremacy in Maria Edgeworth’s “Lame Jervas”
      Deven M. Parker
      Chapter 8: Percy Shelley, Political Machines, and the Pre-History of the Post-Liberal
      Jamison Kantor
      Afterword: On the Uses of the History of Technology for Literary Studies and Vice Versa
      Joseph Drury
      Bibliography
      Notes on Contributors
      Index

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