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Johnson's Critical Presence - Image, History, Judgment (Hardcover, illustrated edition)
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Johnson's Critical Presence - Image, History, Judgment (Hardcover, illustrated edition)
Series: Studies in Early Modern English Literature
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Samuel Johnson remains one of the most frequently discussed and
cited of the eighteenth-century critics; but historians of
criticism have invariably interpreted his work within conventions
that have allowed for little evaluative commerce between the needs
of the critical present and the voices of the critical past.
Smallwood's argument is that Johnson's alienation from the modern
critical scene stems in part from historians' tendency to tell the
story of criticism as a narrative of improvement. The image of
Johnson conceived by his antagonists in the eighteenth century has
been perpetuated by romanticism, by nineteenth-century
representational routines and mediated to the present day, most
recently, by varieties of 'radical theory'. In Johnson's Critical
Presence Smallwood offers a new account of Johnson's major critical
writings conceived according to a different kind of historical
potential. He suggests that the historicization of
eighteenth-century criticism can best be understood in the light of
the 'dialogic' and 'translational' historiographies of Collingwood,
Gadamer and Ricoeur, and that the explanatory contexts of Johnson's
criticism must include poetry in addition to theory; in this his
study seeks to displace both the history of ideas as the leading
paradigm for the history of criticism and to question the
developmental narrative on which it relies. By in-depth analysis of
Johnson's response to Shakespeare's plays and to the poetry of
Abraham Cowley, Smallwood constructs a non-reductive context of
emotional experience for Johnson's criticism. This embraces the
dynamic satirical caricatures by James Gillray of Johnson as
critic, the irony of Johnson's critical affinities with the major
romantics, and is set against twentieth-century responses to the
literary 'canon'. Smallwood argues that not only Johnson's
emotional sensitivities, but also the ironic voices within the
critical text itself, must be fully appreciated before Johnson's
current relevance, or even his historical value, can be grasped.
General
Imprint: |
Ashgate Publishing Limited
|
Country of origin: |
United Kingdom |
Series: |
Studies in Early Modern English Literature |
Release date: |
2004 |
First published: |
2004 |
Authors: |
Philip Smallwood
|
Dimensions: |
229 x 152 x 19mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Hardcover
|
Pages: |
190 |
Edition: |
illustrated edition |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-7546-3357-0 |
Categories: |
Books >
Humanities >
History >
General
Books >
History >
General
|
LSN: |
0-7546-3357-8 |
Barcode: |
9780754633570 |
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