Description

Book Synopsis

From Restoration poets and playwrights Dryden, Rochester and Behn, through to the great eighteenth-century novelists and satirists Richardson, Burney and Defoe, this volume discusses the key literary developments of the age. Covering important topics of debate, such as trade, expansion and slavery, nature, liberty, and print culture, this York Notes Companion also incorporates relevant critical theory throughout for a complete and wide-ranging introduction.



Trade Review

"Pearson’s guide to theLong 18th Century would be an extremely helpful resource to any student of A level to undergraduate level. It is a very easily readable guide to a century of dense social context; the book successfully manages to break this context down into easily comprehensible sections. One can easily dip in and out of the text; the subsections ensure that the writing is always focused and relevant and prevent one from getting lost in a mass of text. The style is academic, yet cogent and accessible and the index is thorough and comprehensive enough to make using the book very easy...

The texts focused upon for the extended commentaries are well selected and overall it provides an essential guide to an era which can initially seem daunting in its range of innovations and heavily loaded political and social context."

- Emily Scurrah, English Student, Warcwick University



Table of Contents

Part One: Introduction

Part Two: A cultural background

Part Three: Text, Writers and Contexts

Verse: John Dryden, Samuel Johnson and John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester

Extended commentary: Wilmot, The Imperfect Enjoyment (1680)

Drama: Aphra Behn, William Congreve and Richard Brinsley Sheridan

Extended commentary: Behn, The Rover (1677-81)

Political and social satire: Alexander Pope, Jonathan Swift and Mary Wortley Montagu

Extended commentary: Pope: The Rape of the Lock (1712-4)

Pastoral/Anti-Pastoral Poetry: James Thomson, Oliver Goldsmith, George Crabbe and William Cowper

Extended commentary: Crabbe, The Village (1783)

The Novel, Part I: John Bunyan, Eliza Haywood, Samuel Richardson and Fanny Burney

Extended commentary: Haywood, Fantomina (1725)

The Novel Part II: Daniel Defoe, Henry Fielding, and Laurence Sterne

Extended commentary: Sterne, The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy (1759-67)

Part Four: Critical theories and debates

Man, Nature and Liberty

Gender and Sexuality

Trade, Colonial Expansion and Slavery

A Culture of Print

Part Five: References and resources

Timeline

Further reading

Index

York Notes Companions The Long 18th Century

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    £999.99

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    A Paperback by Penny Pritchard

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      Publisher: Pearson Education Limited
      Publication Date: 1/14/2010 12:06:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781408204733, 978-1408204733
      ISBN10: 1408204738

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      From Restoration poets and playwrights Dryden, Rochester and Behn, through to the great eighteenth-century novelists and satirists Richardson, Burney and Defoe, this volume discusses the key literary developments of the age. Covering important topics of debate, such as trade, expansion and slavery, nature, liberty, and print culture, this York Notes Companion also incorporates relevant critical theory throughout for a complete and wide-ranging introduction.



      Trade Review

      "Pearson’s guide to theLong 18th Century would be an extremely helpful resource to any student of A level to undergraduate level. It is a very easily readable guide to a century of dense social context; the book successfully manages to break this context down into easily comprehensible sections. One can easily dip in and out of the text; the subsections ensure that the writing is always focused and relevant and prevent one from getting lost in a mass of text. The style is academic, yet cogent and accessible and the index is thorough and comprehensive enough to make using the book very easy...

      The texts focused upon for the extended commentaries are well selected and overall it provides an essential guide to an era which can initially seem daunting in its range of innovations and heavily loaded political and social context."

      - Emily Scurrah, English Student, Warcwick University



      Table of Contents

      Part One: Introduction

      Part Two: A cultural background

      Part Three: Text, Writers and Contexts

      Verse: John Dryden, Samuel Johnson and John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester

      Extended commentary: Wilmot, The Imperfect Enjoyment (1680)

      Drama: Aphra Behn, William Congreve and Richard Brinsley Sheridan

      Extended commentary: Behn, The Rover (1677-81)

      Political and social satire: Alexander Pope, Jonathan Swift and Mary Wortley Montagu

      Extended commentary: Pope: The Rape of the Lock (1712-4)

      Pastoral/Anti-Pastoral Poetry: James Thomson, Oliver Goldsmith, George Crabbe and William Cowper

      Extended commentary: Crabbe, The Village (1783)

      The Novel, Part I: John Bunyan, Eliza Haywood, Samuel Richardson and Fanny Burney

      Extended commentary: Haywood, Fantomina (1725)

      The Novel Part II: Daniel Defoe, Henry Fielding, and Laurence Sterne

      Extended commentary: Sterne, The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy (1759-67)

      Part Four: Critical theories and debates

      Man, Nature and Liberty

      Gender and Sexuality

      Trade, Colonial Expansion and Slavery

      A Culture of Print

      Part Five: References and resources

      Timeline

      Further reading

      Index

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