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The practice of satire in England, 1658-1770 / Ashley Marshall.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Marshall, Ashley.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Satire, English--History and criticism.
- Satire, English.
- English literature--18th century--History and criticism.
- English literature.
- English literature--17th century--History and criticism.
- Physical Description:
- xviii, 430 pages ; 24 cm
- Place of Publication:
- Baltimore : Johns Hopkins University Press, 2013.
- Contents:
- Chapter 1 Canonical and Noncanonical Satire, 1658-1770: Some Questions of Definition, Aims, and Method 1
- I The "Definition" Quagmire and the Problem of Descriptive Terminology 2
- II Genre versus Mode 5
- III The Modern Critical Canon and Its Implications 8
- IV The Total Satire Canon and Its Economic Context 14
- The Production of Satire in England, 1658-1770 14
- Price, Format, Dissemination, and Implied Audiences 20
- V Some Issues of Coverage and Organization 26
- VI The Uses of a Taxonomic Methodology 30
- The Varieties of Satire 31
- Forecasting Some Conclusions 33
- The Nature of the Enterprise 37
- Chapter 2 Contemporary Views on Satire, 1658-1770 39
- I Concepts of Satire 40
- "Satire": Etymology and Terminology 40
- Definition by Contrast 42
- II The Business of Satire 43
- The Opposition to Satire 44
- The Case for Satire 48
- III The Practice and Province of Satire 53
- Acceptable and Problematical Satiric Methods 54
- Appropriate and Inappropriate Satiric Targets 57
- IV Characterizing the Satirist 62
- V Perceptions of Eighteenth-Century Satire Then and Now 65
- Chapter 3 Satire in the Carolean Period 70
- I Some Preliminary Considerations: Realities versus Assumptions 72
- II Dryden. Rochester, Buckingham 74
- Carolean Dryden: Lampoonist, Social Commentator. Propagandist 75
- Rochester: Skeptical, Provocative, Negative 79
- Buckingham's Purposive Satire 82
- III Marvell, Ayloffe, Oldham 86
- Marvell as Polemical Satirist 86
- Ayloffe's Antimonarchical Diatribes 88
- Oldham's Juvenalian Performances 89
- IV Hudibras and Other Camouflage Satires 92
- V Personal and Social Satire: From Lampoons to Otway and Lee 97
- VI Chronological Change, 1658-1685 101
- VII Issues: Satiric Intensity, Tone, Positives-and the Problem of Application 104
- Intensity 104
- Tone 105
- Presentation of Positives 108
- The Problem of Application 110
- VIII The Discontinuous World of Carolean Satire 111
- Chatter 4 Beyond Carolean: Satire at the End of the Seventeenth Century 113
- I Altered Circumstances 115
- II Dryden as Satirist, 1685-1700 119
- III Poetic Satire 126
- Tutchin, Defoe, and Political Satire 127
- Gould and Defamatory Satire 130
- Garth and Blackmore 133
- Brown, Ward, and Commercial Satire 136
- IV Dramatic Satire 139
- Shadwell and Exemplary Comedy 140
- Mitigated Satire: Cibber, Vanbrugh, Farquhar 143
- Harsh Social Satire: Congreve and Southerne 145
- V The State of Satire ca. 1700 148
- Chapter 5 Defoe, Swift, and New Varieties of Satire, 1700-1715 150
- I Defoe as Satirist 153
- Attack and Defense 154
- Instruction and Direct Warning (Aimed at the Audience) 155
- Indirect Exposure and Discomfiture 156
- II Religious and Political Satire 158
- Topical Controversy 158
- Monitory Satire in the Manner of Defoe 161
- Ideological Argumentation: Dunton, Defoe, and Others 165
- III Social and Moral Satire 168
- Generalized Satire 168
- Didactic Satire in the Manner of Steele 169
- Particularized and Topical Satire 171
- Argument and Inquiry: Mandeville and Prior 172
- IV The Alleged "Scriblerians" 174
- V Swift before Gulliver 180
- Jokiness and Play 181
- Destruction and Negativity 182
- Purposive Defamation and Defense 183
- Indirection and Difficult Satire 186
- VI Characterizing the Early Eighteenth Century 191
- Chapter 6 Harsh and Sympathetic Satire, 1726-1745 194
- I Pope and Swift among Their Contemporaries 196
- Political Commentary and Combat 197
- The Culture wars 201
- Social Satire 205
- II Pope, Swift, Gay 209
- Pope 209
- Swift 211
- Gay 214
- III The Problem of Meaning in Gulliver's Travels 220
- IV Fielding and the Move toward Sympathetic Satire 226
- Playful Satire and Entertainment 227
- Provocation and Preachment 227
- Distributive Justice: Joseph Andrews and Tom Jones 229
- Fielding's Concept of Satire 231
- Sympathetic Satire 134
- V Alive and Well: The State of Satire at Midcentury 237
- Chapter 7 Churchill, Foote, Macklin, Garrick, Smollett, Sterne, and Others, 1745-1770 239
- I The Rise of "Poetic" Satire 241
- Frivolity and Entertainment 242
- Moral Preachment 243
- Particularized Attack 244
- Poeticized Satire 246
- Churchill's Nonpolitical Satire 248
- II Wilkes, Churchill, and Political Controversy in the 1760s 250
- The North Briton 250
- Churchill's Political Satire 251
- Visual Satire 253
- Wilkes's Essay on Woman 254
- III Satire in the Commercial Theater 255
- Social Comedy 256
- Lightweight Afterpiece Entertainment 259
- Samuel Foote 261
- Charles Macklin 265
- David Garrick 269
- IV Satire in the Mid-Eighteenth-Century Novel 273
- Smollett's Dark Satire 274
- The Late Career of Fielding 276
- Tristram Shandy and the Singularity of Sterne 278
- Charlotte Lennox. Oliver Goldsmith, Sarah Fielding: Satire and Sentiment 283
- V Satire for a Stable Era 286.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references (pages [355]-409) and index.
- ISBN:
- 9781421408163
- 9781421408170
- 1421408163
- 1421408171
- OCLC:
- 798263907
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