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This is the first comprehensive study of the system of literary
patronage in early modern England and it demonstrates that far from
declining by 1750 - as many commentators have suggested - the
system persisted, albeit in altered forms, throughout the
eighteenth century. Combining the perspectives of literary, social
and political history, Dustin Griffin lays out the workings of the
patronage system and shows how authors wrote within that system,
manipulating it to their advantage or resisting the claims of
patrons by advancing counterclaims of their own. Professor Griffin
describes the cultural economics of patronage and argues that
literary patronage was in effect always 'political'. Chapters on
individual authors, including Dryden, Swift, Pope and Johnson, as
well as Edward Young, Richard Savage, Mary Leapor and Charlotte
Lennox, address the author's role in the system, the rhetoric of
dedications and the larger poetics of patronage.
Swift and Pope were lifelong friends and fellow satirists with
shared literary sensibilities. But there were significant
differences - demographic, psychological, and literary - between
them: an Anglican and a Roman Catholic, an Irishman and an
Englishman, one deeply committed to politically engaged poetry, and
the other reluctant to engage in partisanship and inclined to
distinguish poetry from politics. In this book, Dustin Griffin
argues that we need to pay more attention to those differences,
which both authors recognised and discussed. Their letters, poems,
and satires can be read as stages in an ongoing conversation or
satiric dialogue: each often wrote for the other, sometimes
addressing him directly, sometimes emulating or imitating. In some
sense, each was constantly replying to the other. From their
lifelong dialogue emerges not only the extraordinary affection and
admiration they felt for each other, but also the occasional
irritation and resentment that kept them both together and apart.
The poetry of the mid- and late-eighteenth century has long been regarded as essentially private and apolitical. Dustin Griffin argues in this study that the poets of the period were actually addressing the great issues of national life--rebellion at home, imperial wars abroad, an expanding commercial empire, and an emerging new British national identity. He also reveals that poets such as Thomas Gray, Christopher Smart, Oliver Goldsmith, and William Cowper were engaged in the century-long debate about the nature of true patriotism.
This book explores the way in which Milton's poems served as a rich
and fruitful resource for the English poets of the eighteenth
century. It refutes the old argument about Milton's allegedly 'bad
influence' and challenges suggestions that great writers generally
inhibit or oppress their successors. Regaining Paradise argues that
what interested eighteenth-century poets was primarily Milton's
garden myth and that the best writers typically found Milton, not a
burden, but an inspiring resources available for their
appropriation. Regaining Paradise cuts across some of the
boundaries that traditionally divide English studies. It looks at
Milton not in a Renaissance but an eighteenth-century context and
it combines the perspectives of literary history and literary
theory.
This is the first comprehensive study of the system of literary
patronage in early modern England and it demonstrates that far from
declining by 1750 - as many commentators have suggested - the
system persisted, albeit in altered forms, throughout the
eighteenth century. Combining the perspectives of literary, social
and political history, Dustin Griffin lays out the workings of the
patronage system and shows how authors wrote within that system,
manipulating it to their advantage or resisting the claims of
patrons by advancing counterclaims of their own. Professor Griffin
describes the cultural economics of patronage and argues that
literary patronage was in effect always 'political'. Chapters on
individual authors, including Dryden, Swift, Pope and Johnson, as
well as Edward Young, Richard Savage, Mary Leapor and Charlotte
Lennox, address the author's role in the system, the rhetoric of
dedications and the larger poetics of patronage.
The poetry of the mid - and late eighteenth century has long been
regarded as primarily private and apolitical; in this wide-ranging
study Dustin Griffin argues that in fact the poets of the period
were addressing the great issues of national life - rebellion at
home, imperial wars abroad, an expanding commercial empire, an
emerging new 'British' national identity. Taking up the topic of
patriotic verse, Griffin shows that the poets, like many
contemporary essayists, sermon writers, and political journalists,
were engaged in the century-long debate about the nature of 'true
patriotism'. Griffin argues that canonical figures - James Thomson,
William Collins, Thomas Gray, Christopher Smart, Oliver Goldsmith,
William Cowper - along with less canonical writers such as Mark
Akenside, John Dyer, and Ann Yearsley ask how poets might serve and
even save their country, and take their place in a broader
tradition of patriotic verse.
Swift and Pope were lifelong friends and fellow satirists with
shared literary sensibilities. But there were significant
differences - demographic, psychological, and literary - between
them: an Anglican and a Roman Catholic, an Irishman and an
Englishman, one deeply committed to politically engaged poetry, and
the other reluctant to engage in partisanship and inclined to
distinguish poetry from politics. In this book, Dustin Griffin
argues that we need to pay more attention to those differences,
which both authors recognised and discussed. Their letters, poems,
and satires can be read as stages in an ongoing conversation or
satiric dialogue: each often wrote for the other, sometimes
addressing him directly, sometimes emulating or imitating. In some
sense, each was constantly replying to the other. From their
lifelong dialogue emerges not only the extraordinary affection and
admiration they felt for each other, but also the occasional
irritation and resentment that kept them both together and apart.
This book deals with changing conditions and conceptions of
authorship in the long eighteenth century, a period often said to
have witnessed the birth of the modern author. It focuses not on
authorial self-presentation or self-revelation but on an author’s
interactions with booksellers, collaborators, rivals,
correspondents, patrons, and audiences. Challenging older accounts
of the development of authorship in the period as well as newer
claims about the “public sphere” and the “professional
writer,” it engages with recent work on print culture and the
history of the book. Methodologically eclectic, it moves from close
readings to strategic contextualization. The book is organized both
chronologically and topically. Early chapters deal with writers –
notably Milton and Dryden – at the beginning of the long
eighteenth century, and later chapters focus more on writers —
among them Johnson, Gray, and Gibbon — toward its end. Looking
beyond the traditional canon, it considers a number of little-known
or little-studied writers, including Richard Bentley, Thomas Birch,
William Oldys, James Ralph, and Thomas Ruddiman. Some of the essays
are organized around a single writer, but most deal with a broad
topic – literary collaboration, literary careers, the republic of
letters, the alleged rise of the “professional writer,” and the
rather different figure of the “author by profession.”
Published by University of Delaware Press. Distributed worldwide
by Rutgers University Press.
Satire has been with us since at least the Greeks and is a staple
of the literary classroom. Dustin Griffin now moves away from the
prevailing moral-didactic approach established thirty years ago to
a more open view and reintegrates the Menippean tradition with the
tradition of formal verse satire. Exploring texts from Aristophanes
to the moderns, with special emphasis on the eighteenth century,
Griffin uses a dozen major figures - Horace, Juvenal, Persius,
Lucian, More, Rabelais, Donne, Dryden, Pope, Swift, Blake, and
Byron - as primary examples. Because satire often operates as a
mode or procedure rather than as a genre, Griffin offers not a
comprehensive theory but a set of critical perspectives. Some of
his topics are traditional in satire criticism: the role of the
satirist as moralist; the nature of satiric rhetoric; and the
impact of satire on the political order. Others are new: the
problems of satire and closure; the pleasure it affords readers and
writers; and the socioeconomic status of the satirist. Griffin
concludes that satire is problematic, open-ended, essayistic, and
ambiguous in its relationship to history, uncertain in its
political effect, resistant to formal closure, more inclined to ask
questions than to provide answers, and ambivalent about the
pleasures it offers. Here is the ideal introduction to satire for
the student and, for the experienced scholar, an occasion to
reconsider the uses, problems, and pleasures of satire in light of
contemporary theory.
Nestled in the Berkshires of western Massachusetts, Williamstown is
home to one of the most prestigious liberal arts colleges in the
country, Williams College. In this engrossing and entertaining
book, Dustin Griffin offers fourteen vignettes that detail the
local history of this ideal New England college town. Each chapter
focuses on the stories behind a single feature that visitors to
present-day Williamstown and Williams College might encounter,
including a Civil War statue on Main Street, town-wide holidays, a
popular hiking trail, a stained-glass window in the college chapel,
and a song that alumni sing at reunions. Well researched and
written in an accessible style, Williamstown and Williams College
is a must-have resource for anyone connected with Williams College
- from students and parents to alumni - as well as visitors who
want to understand what makes this town unique.
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