Restoration Literature, 1660-1700
Author: James Sutherland
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Published: 1990
Total Pages: 589
ISBN-13: 9780198122340
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Author: James Sutherland
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Published: 1990
Total Pages: 589
ISBN-13: 9780198122340
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Gillian Wright
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 2020
Total Pages: 279
ISBN-13: 1108493971
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAn innovative account of the literary Restoration that stresses its diversity, historical self-awareness, and openness to new voices.
Author: Paul Hammond
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Published: 2002
Total Pages: 484
ISBN-13: 9780192833310
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis anthology brings together a stimulating and entertaining collection of works from the confident and creative period of 1660-1700. The literature of this time is by turns refined, poignant, and brash. Alongside major works such as Dryden's Absalom and Achitophel and Mac Flecknoe, printed in their entirety, is a substantial group of lyrics by Rochester, while Milton's Paradise Lost provides a running commentary on the Restoration scene. Scurrilous satires and pamphlets, diaries, theatrical prologues, translations and striking work by women poets and autobiographers illustrate the period in politics, religion, philosophy and in attitudes to town and country, love and friendship.
Author: George Etherege
Publisher:
Published: 1669
Total Pages: 92
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Ian Mortimer
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Published: 2017-04-11
Total Pages: 438
ISBN-13: 1681774003
DOWNLOAD EBOOKImagine you could see the smiles of the people mentioned in Samuel Pepys’s diary, hear the shouts of market traders, and touch their wares. How would you find your way around? Where would you stay? What would you wear? Where might you be suspected of witchcraft? Where would you be welcome? This is an up-close-and-personal look at Britain between the Restoration of King Charles II in 1660 and the end of the century. The last witch is sentenced to death just two years before Isaac Newton’s Principia Mathematica, the bedrock of modern science, is published. Religion still has a severe grip on society and yet some—including the king—flout every moral convention they can find. There are great fires in London and Edinburgh; the plague disappears; a global trading empire develops.Over these four dynamic decades, the last vestiges of medievalism are swept away and replaced by a tremendous cultural flowering. Why are half the people you meet under the age of twenty-one? What is considered rude? And why is dueling so popular? Mortimer delves into the nuances of daily life to paint a vibrant and detailed picture of society at the dawn of the modern world as only he can.
Author: Matthew C. Augustine
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Published: 2024-11-06
Total Pages: 801
ISBN-13: 0192690892
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe Oxford Handbook of Restoration Literature begins by asking if there was a distinctive literature of the Restoration. For a long time, the answer seemed obvious: heroic drama, libertine comedy, scandalous lyrics, and the short but brilliant career of John Wilmot, earl of Rochester. Could there be an age when the coincidence of literary culture and political rule were any more obvious? But as this Handbook will remind us, some of the most wonderful literature of this Restoration came from writers who had lived across the decades of turbulence and into an age when the Stuart kings returned, when the Church and House of Lords were restored, a world made safe for bishops and for the memory of divine right rule. Of course, these returns and restorations did not meet with uniform celebration. John Milton wrote his great epic poems not in quiet submission but in a kind of resistance to the dominant culture of the 1660s, and Andrew Marvell produced his most brilliant satiric verse by holding up a looking glass to court corruption and Anglican intolerance. So we begin with the most obvious conclusion: Restoration literature does and does not fit to the categories that so long defined the late Stuart age. This book explores and contests, challenges and reimagines the experience embodied by the writing of the late Stuart world and invites readers new to this world and those who have often read its literatures to the pleasures but as well to the challenges and discomforts of its texts.
Author: Richard Garnett
Publisher:
Published: 1895
Total Pages: 308
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Rebecca Bullard
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 2017-03-24
Total Pages: 464
ISBN-13: 1108210996
DOWNLOAD EBOOKSecret history, with its claim to expose secrets of state and the sexual intrigues of monarchs and ministers, alarmed and thrilled readers across Europe and America from the mid-seventeenth to the mid-nineteenth century. Scholars have recognised for some time the important position that the genre occupies within the literary and political culture of the Enlightenment. Of interest to students of British, French and American literature, as well as political and intellectual history, this new volume of essays demonstrates for the first time the extent of secret history's interaction with different literary traditions, including epic poetry, Restoration drama, periodicals, and slave narratives. It reveals secret history's impact on authors, readers, and the book trade in England, France, and America throughout the long eighteenth century. In doing so, it offers a case study for approaching questions of genre at moments when political and cultural shifts put strain on traditional generic categories.
Author: Peggy Thompson
Publisher: Lexington Books
Published: 2012
Total Pages: 203
ISBN-13: 1611483727
DOWNLOAD EBOOKCoyness and Crime examines the extraordinary focus on feminine coyness in forty English comedies by ten diverse playwrights of the late seventeenth-century. In contexts ranging from reaffirmations of church and king to emerging interests in liberty and novelty, these plays consistently reveal women caught in an ironic and nearly intractable convergence of objectification and culpability that allows them little innocent sexual agency; this is both the source and the legacy of coyness in Restoration comedy.