This, Howard D.Weinbrot's magnum opus, draws on a large range of material to chronicle the developing confidence in British national literature from the 1670s to the 1770s. Using varied biblical, classical, English, economic, French, historical,...
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This, Howard D.Weinbrot's magnum opus, draws on a large range of material to chronicle the developing confidence in British national literature from the 1670s to the 1770s. Using varied biblical, classical, English, economic, French, historical, literary, philosophical, political and Scottish sources, Professor Weinbrot shows that one of the central trends of eighteenth-century Britain was the movement away from classical towards native values and models. He demonstrates for example that Dryden's Essay of Dramatick Poesy reflects nationalist aesthetics, that Pope's Rape of the Lock affirms domestic peace while rejecting Homeric violence, and that Windsor Forest sings un-Roman peaceful expansion through trade. This learned and lucidly written book offers revisionist but historically grounded interpretations of these and many other important works. It also helps to characterize the complex and varied culture in eighteenth-century Britain
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015)
Moderns, ancients, and the secular: the limits of southern hegemony -- The spiritual: truth was not the inclination of the first ages -- An ambition to excel -- The making of the modern canon -- Dryden's "Essay of dramatick poesie:" the poetics of nationalism -- Homeric wars -- The "pax Romana" and the "pax Britannica": The ethics of war and the ethics of trade -- "Windsor forest" and "The rape of the lock" -- Greek jockeys and British heroes: the rise and fall of the Pindaric ode -- Odes to the nation and the north: Dryden, Collins, and Gray -- The house of David and the house of St. George: philosemitism, Hebrews, and Handel -- Beyond the Hebrew leaven: Smart and the God in Christ -- Celtic Scotland -- Ossian in Scotland, Great Britain, and modern Europe: joining Britannia's issue -- Conclusion. Synthesizing all the nations under heaven