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Books > History > World history > 1750 to 1900
How do we understand memory in the early novel? Departing from
traditional empiricist conceptualizations of remembering, Mind over
Matter uncovers a social model of memory in Enlightenment fiction
that is fluid and evolving - one that has the capacity to alter
personal histories. Memories are not merely imprints of first-hand
experience stored in the mind, but composite stories transacted
through dialogue and reading.Through new readings of works by
Daniel Defoe, Frances Burney, Laurence Sterne, Jane Austen, and
others, Sarah Eron tracks the fictional qualities of memory as a
force that, much like the Romantic imagination, transposes time and
alters forms. From Crusoe's island and Toby's bowling green to
Evelina's garden and Fanny's east room, memory can alter,
reconstitute, and even overcome the conditions of the physical
environment. Memory shapes the process and outcome of the novel's
imaginative world-making, drafting new realities to better endure
trauma and crises. Bringing together philosophy of mind, formalism,
and narrative theory, Eron highlights how eighteenth-century
novelists explored remembering as a creative and curative force for
literary characters and readers alike. If memory is where we
fictionalize reality, fiction--and especially the novel--is where
the truths of memory can be found.
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The Modern art of Boxing, as Practised by Mendoza, Humphreys, Ryan, Ward, Wason, Johnson, and Other Eminent Pugilists. Also, the six Lessons of Mendoza, as Published by him, for the use of his Scholars
(Hardcover)
Daniel Mendoza
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R753
Discovery Miles 7 530
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Americans wrote fiercely during the Civil War. War surprised,
devastated, and opened up imagination, taking hold of Americans'
words as well as their homes and families. The personal
diary-wildly ragged yet rooted in day following day-was one place
Americans wrote their war. Diaries, then, have become one of the
best-known, most-used sources for exploring the life of the mind in
a war-torn place and time. Delving into several familiar wartime
diaries kept by women of the southern slave-owning class, Steven
Stowe recaptures their motivations to keep the days close even as
war tore apart the brutal system of slavery that had benefited
them. Whether the diarists recorded thoughts about themselves,
their opinions about men, or their observations about slavery,
race, and warfare, Stowe shows how these women, by writing the
immediate moment, found meaning in a changing world. In studying
the inner lives of these unsympathetic characters, Stowe also
explores the importance-and the limits-of historical empathy as a
condition for knowing the past, demonstrating how these plain,
first-draft texts can offer new ways to make sense of the world in
which these Confederate women lived.
Paris 1744: a royal official approaches a shopkeeper's wife,
proposing that she become an informant to the Crown and report on
the conversations of foreign diplomats who take meals at her house.
Her reports, housed today in the Bastille archives, are little more
than a collection of wartime rumors gathered from clandestine,
handwritten newspapers and everyday talk around the city, yet she
comes to imagine herself a political agent on behalf of Louis XV.
In this book Tabetha Ewing analyses different forms of everyday
talk over the course of the War of Austrian Succession to explore
how they led to new understandings of political identity. Royal
policing and clandestine media shaped what Parisians knew and how
they conceptualized events in a period of war. Responding to
subversive political verses or to an official declaration hawked on
the city streets, they experienced the pleasures and dangers of
talking politics and exchanging opinions on matters of state,
whether in the cafe or the wigmaker's shop. Tabetha Ewing argues
that this ephemeral expression of opinions on war and diplomacy,
and its surveillance, transcription, and circulation shaped a
distinctly early-modern form of political participation. Whilst the
study of sedition has received much scholarly attention, Ewing
explores the unexpectedly dynamic effect of loyalty to the French
monarchy, spoken in the distinct voices of the common people and
urban elites. One such effect was a sense of national identity,
arising from the interplay of events, both everyday and
extraordinary, and their representation in different media. Rumor,
diplomacy and war in Enlightenment Paris rethinks the relationship
of the oral and the written, the official and the unofficial, by
revealing how gossip, fantasy, and uncertainty are deeply embedded
in the emergent modern, public life of French society.
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