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Is history driven more by principle or interest? Are ideas of
historical progress obsolete? Is it unforgivable to change one's
mind or political allegiance? Did the eighteenth century really
exchange the civilizing force of commercial advantage for political
conflict? In this new account of liberal thought from its roots in
seventeenth-century English thinking to the end of the eighteenth
century, Annabel Patterson tackles these important
historiographical questions. She rescues the term "whig" from the
low regard attached to it; denies the primacy of self-interest in
the political struggles of Georgian England; and argues that while
Whigs may have strayed from liberal principles on occasion
(nobody's perfect), nevertheless many were true progressives. In a
series of case studies, mainly from the reign of George III,
Patterson examines or re-examines the careers of such prominent
individuals as John Almon, Edmund Burke, Sir Joshua Reynolds,
Thomas Erskine, and, at the end of the century, William Wordsworth.
She also addresses a host of secondary characters, reshaping our
thinking about both well-known and lesser figures of the time.
Tracking a coherent, sustained, and adaptable liberalism throughout
the eighteenth century, Patterson overturns common assumptions of
political, cultural, and art historians. The author delivers fresh
insights into the careers of those who called themselves Whigs,
their place in British political thought, and the crucial
ramifications of this thinking in the American political arena.
Andrew Marvell (1621-78) is best known today as the author of a
handful of exquisite lyrics and provocative political poems. In his
own time, however, Marvell was famous for his brilliant prose
interventions in the major issues of the Restoration, religious
toleration, and what he called "arbitrary" as distinct from
parliamentary government. This is the first modern edition of all
Marvell's prose pamphlets, complete with introductions and
annotation explaining the historical context. Four major scholars
of the Restoration era have collaborated to produce this truly
Anglo-American edition. From the Rehearsal Transpros'd, a
serio-comic best-seller which appeared with tacit permission from
Charles II himself, through the documentary Account of the Growth
of Popery and Arbitrary Government, Marvell established himself not
only as a model of liberal thought for the eighteenth century but
also as an irresistible new voice in political polemic, wittier,
more literary, and hence more readable than his contemporaries.
Annabel Patterson's "Reading Between the Lines" tackles a central
topic in literary studies, the "Great Books Debate" and the
question of teaching the canon of English literature, providing a
moderate stance between the Western canon's radical opponents and
its zealous protectors. It aims to mediate between conservative
proponents of the traditional approach to literary education, and
those who insist that literature is an empty category filled only
according to society's needs.
Annabel Patterson's "Reading Between the Lines" tackles a central
topic in literary studies, the "Great Books Debate" and the
question of teaching the canon of English literature, providing a
moderate stance between the Western canon's radical opponents and
its zealous protectors. It aims to mediate between conservative
proponents of the traditional approach to literary education, and
those who insist that literature is an empty category filled only
according to society's needs.
Andrew Marvell (1621-78) is best known today as the author of a
handful of exquisite lyrics and provocative political poems. In his
own time, however, Marvell was famous for his brilliant prose
interventions in the major issues of the Restoration, religious
toleration, and what he called "arbitrary" as distinct from
parliamentary government. This is the first modern edition of all
Marvell's prose pamphlets, complete with introductions and
annotation explaining the historical context. Four major scholars
of the Restoration era have collaborated to produce this truly
Anglo-American edition. From the Rehearsal Transpros'd, a
serio-comic best-seller which appeared with tacit permission from
Charles II himself, through the documentary Account of the Growth
of Popery and Arbitrary Government, Marvell established himself not
only as a model of liberal thought for the eighteenth century but
also as an irresistible new voice in political polemic, wittier,
more literary, and hence more readable than his contemporaries.
Early Modern Liberalism rediscovers an important phase in the
development of liberal thought. Despite the fact that 'liberalism'
as a term was not applied to political thought or political parties
in England until late in the eighteenth century, Annabel Patterson
argues that its central ideas were formulated by
seventeenth-century English writers in defiance of their society's
norms, and then transmitted to the American colonies. The author is
particularly concerned with the means and agents of transmission,
with those who ensured that the liberal canon would be preserved,
expanded, republished and dispersed; for example, the
eighteenth-century philanthropist Thomas Hollis, among whose heroes
were Milton, Marvell, Locke and Algernon Sidney. Framed by chapters
on Hollis and Adams, this book shows what early modern liberals had
in common and reopens the transatlantic conversation that began in
the seventeenth century.
While the term "liberalism" was not applied to political thought or political parties in England until the late eighteenth century, the author argues that its central ideas were formulated by seventeenth-century English writers in defiance of their society's norms, and then transmitted to the American colonies. In this study Annabel Patterson is particularly concerned with the means and agents of transmission, and with those who sought to ensure that the liberal canon would be preserved, dispersed and republished.
Milton's Words approaches John Milton in both an old and a new way,
focusing on his genius with words: keywords - the keys to a text or
a theory; words of sexual avoidance and distress; words of abuse;
words of privilege because 'Scripture'; big learned words; and
cunning little words, easily overlooked. After a short account of
Milton's life as a writer, Patterson guides us through most of the
poetry and polemical prose, all too often kept in separate
compartments. She shows how new challenges and crises required
shifts in vocabulary, as well as changes in Milton's views.
What do Milton's words look like when we acknowledge their freight
of personal and political history; when we track them from text to
text; when we consider not only the big, important, learned words
but also the very small ones, such as 'perhaps', which Milton
deployed with consummate skill at some crucial moments in both
poetry and prose, or the phrase 'he who', which replicates the
Latinate 'ille qui', but to which Milton gives a psychological
twist; when we consider not only word frequency, but infrequency,
uniqueness or near uniqueness, as a signal of Milton's interest in
a word; when we tackle these issues in the Latin texts for which
there is not, as yet, a concordance; when we consider the
possibility that certain words gain or lose value for Milton as he
proceeds through his writer's life, and that certain words become
keywords to a particular text, as 'book' becomes to Areopagitica;
when we reconsider the question of Milton's coinages not from the
stern legalistic perspective as to whether he should have made
them, but why he needed them? No one person could complete all
these tasks, and nobody would wish to read a book that appeared to
have completed them. Understanding Milton's words is, and should
remain, a work in progress.
But close attention to Milton's words is not all that this book
offers. It tells a slightly different story about Milton himself
than the ones we have been used to. Starting with an abbreviated
'writer's life', it explains the shape of Milton's writing career,
the life-long tension between his literary ambitions and the
pressure of exhilarating political circumstances. The Milton you
will find here walked no straight path from his Cambridge degree to
the epic he had been talking of writing when he was still at
university, but instead cut his teeth as a writer in an entirely
different field, political controversy. The effect on his
vocabulary of his campaign to reform his country's church
government and its divorce laws was galvanic, not least because he
had to reconstitute his own image from that of a shy and bookish
person to that of a crusader. He discovered that he enjoyed not
only verbal conflict, but also mudslinging, and rude words became
part of his arsenal in his very first prose tract. 'Marriage' and
'divorce', on the other hand, became loaded words for Milton for
personal reasons, and he developed a new set of verbal resources,
which Patterson calls 'words of avoidance', to help him tackle the
subject. He never got over the experience of writing the divorce
tracts. It was still on his mind when at the end of his life he
revised his Latin treatise on theology, De Doctrina Christiana.
Then, for about a decade, he was called upon to justify the Long
Parliament's execution of Charles I, which forced him to come to
terms with the political keywords of his generation, words such as
'king', 'liberty', 'tyranny', and 'the people'. When the republican
experiment collapsed on the death of Oliver Cromwell, after one
last brave salvo against the restoration of the monarchy Milton
retired back into the role of private intellectual and poet. This
we all know; but because the poetry and the prose have been
segregated for so long, and still tend to be read as separate
enterprises, we have not tended to track Milton's favorite
political words into the great poems, where, as we perhaps
unwillingly will see, they change their valence. In general, though
it is impossible to do justice to all of Milton's feats of word use
and arrangement, this book will tell a complete tale of Milton the
man; his psychological trajectory as well as that more formal
notion, his 'character'; his mistakes as well as his masterpieces.
"Reading Holinshed's Chronicles" is the first major study of the
greatest of the Elizabethan chronicles. Holinshed's "Chronicles"--a
massive history of England, Scotland, and Ireland--has been
traditionally read as the source material for many of Shakespeare's
plays or as an archaic form of history-writing. Annabel Patterson
insists that the "Chronicles" be read in their own right as an
important and inventive cultural history.
Although we know it by the name of Raphael Holinshed, editor and
major compiler of the 1577 edition, the "Chronicles" was the work
of a group, a collaboration between antiquarians, clergymen,
members of parliament, poets, publishers, and booksellers. Through
a detailed reading, Patterson argues that the "Chronicles" convey
rich insights into the way the Elizabethan middle class understood
their society. Responding to the crisis of disunity which resulted
from the Reformation, the authors of the "Chronicles" embodied and
encouraged an ideal of justice, what we would now call liberalism,
that extended beyond the writing of history into the realms of
politics, law, economics, citizenship, class, and gender. Also,
since the second edition of 1587 was called in by the Privy Council
and revised under supervision, the work constitutes an important
test case for the history of early modern censorship.
An essential book for all students of Tudor history and literature,
"Reading Holinshed's Chronicles" brings into full view a long
misunderstood masterpiece of sixteenth-century English culture.
Charles II's first and most important parliament sat for eighteen
years without a general election, earning itself the sobriquet
"Long." In 1661 this parliament began in eager compliance with the
new king. Gradually disillusioned by Charles's maneuvers, however,
its members came to demand more control of the economy, religion,
and foreign policy, starting a struggle that led to the Exclusion
crisis. This lively book is the first full study of this
Restoration Parliament. Using parliamentary diaries, newsletters,
memoirs, letters from members of parliament, scofflaw pamphlets,
and the king's own speeches, Annabel Patterson describes this
second Long Parliament in an innovative and challenging way,
stressing that how its records were kept and circulated is an
important part of the story. Because the parliamentary debates of
this age were jealously guarded from public knowledge, unofficial
sources of information flourished. Often these are more candid or
colorful than official records. Eighteenth-century historians,
especially if Whiggish, recycled many of them for posterity. The
book, therefore, not only recovers a crucial period of
parliamentary history, one that helps to explain the Glorious
Revolution, it also opens a discussion about historiographical
method.
Patterson follows the fortunes of Virgil's Eclogues from the Middle
Ages to our own century. She argues that Virgilian pastoral spoke
to the intellectuals of each place and time of their own condition.
The study reinspects our standard system of periodization in
literary and art history and challenges some of the current
premises of modernism. This title is part of UC Press's Voices
Revived program, which commemorates University of California
Press's mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and
give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to
1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship
accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title
was originally published in 1987.
Patterson follows the fortunes of Virgil's Eclogues from the Middle
Ages to our own century. She argues that Virgilian pastoral spoke
to the intellectuals of each place and time of their own condition.
The study reinspects our standard system of periodization in
literary and art history and challenges some of the current
premises of modernism. This title is part of UC Press's Voices
Revived program, which commemorates University of California
Press's mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and
give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to
1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship
accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title
was originally published in 1987.
Annabel Patterson here turns her well-known concern with political
history in early modern England into an engine for investigating
our own era and a much wider terrain. The focus of this book is,
broadly, nationalism and internationalism today, approached not
theoretically but through the lens of fiction. Novels are uniquely
capable of dealing with abstract problems by embodying them in the
experience of persons, thereby rendering them more "real."
Patterson takes twelve novels from (almost) all over the world:
India, Africa, Turkey, Crete, the Balkans, Palestine, Afghanistan,
South America, and Mexico, novels which illustrate the dire effects
of some of the following: imperialism, partition, annexation,
ethnic and religious strife, boundaries redrawn by aggression, the
virus of dictatorships, the vulnerability of small countries, and
the meddling of the Great Powers. All are highly instructive, and
excellent reads.
In this imaginative and illuminating work, Annabel Patterson traces
the origins and meanings of the Aesopian fable, as well as its
function in Renaissance culture and subsequently. She shows how the
fable worked as a medium of political analysis and communication,
especially from or on behalf of the politically powerless.
Patterson begins with an analysis of the legendary "Life" of Aesop,
its cultural history and philosophical implications, a topic that
involves such widely separated figures as La Fontaine, Hegel, and
Vygotsky. The myth's origin is recovered here in the saving myth of
Aesop the Ethiopian, black, ugly, who began as a slave but become
both free and influential, a source of political wisdom. She then
traces the early modern history of the fable from Caxton, Lydgate,
and Henryson through the eighteenth century, focusing on such
figures as Spenser, Sidney, Lyly, Shakespeare, and Milton, as well
as the lesser-known John Ogilby, Sir Roger L'Estrange, and Samuel
Croxall.
Patterson discusses the famous fable of "The Belly and the
Members," which, because it articulated in symbolic terms some of
the most intransigent problems in political philosophy and
practice, was still going strong as a symbolic text in the
mid-nineteenth century, where it was focused on industrial
relations by Karl Marx and by George Eliot against electoral
reform.
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