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Author:
Weinbrot, Howard D.
Title:
Literature, religion, and the evolution of culture, 1660-1780 / Howard D. Weinbrot.
Publisher:
Johns Hopkins University Press,
Copyright Date:
2013
Description:
xii, 371 p. : 24 cm.
Subject:
English literature--Early modern, 1500-1700--History and criticism.
English literature--18th century--History and criticism.
Religion and literature--Great Britain.
Literature and society--Great Britain.
Great Britain--Intellectual life--17th century.
Great Britain--Intellectual life--18th century.
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents:
Introduction. The groundwork of change. Eighteenth-Century Evolutionary Theory -- Practial awareness -- The chapters and a definition -- Part I: Threats to the species: madness, discontent, and the danger of dissolution. -- 1. Causation and contexts of hatred: savage beasts mortal and deadly -- Conjuring up reasons: Original sin, fragile connections, church and state -- Aristocratic historiography: advocacy and resistance -- Metaphorical enhancements: floods, propagation, legions, and Dutch treats --2. Madness, extirpation, and Defoe's Shortest Way with the Dissenters -- Madness -- Root and branch -- Defoe's Shortest Way, Sacheverell's Political Union, and religious conflict -- The Shortest Way: the Bible and other clues beyond the obvious -- Response and judgement -- Defoe as a character of his own creation -- Part II: Taking the cure and improving the species: sermons, compulsions, and Methodists. -- 3. The thirtieth of January sermon: from extermination to inclusion -- The thirtieth of January sermon and Royalist Law -- The High Church response and the beginning of change -- Higher church and moderate responses to the High Church response -- Raising the decibals in a lowered church -- State, not church -- God's hand, William's hand, and the Devine Right of Government -- Retrospective -- 4. "Compel them to come in," Luke 14:23: from persecution to persuasion; against Augustinian compulsion -- Revocation of the Edict of Nantes: response and rage -- Contexts changed and Augustine charged -- Happy had his works not been preserved -- Persuade them to come in -- Adopt men from all the nations of the earth: Equiano's conversion --
5. Methodism: from antagonist to relation -- The spreading fog -- Reforming the Reformation? Reforming the reform? -- Grudging acceptance -- Humphrey Clinker: joining the family -- Part III: Evolutionary Reversion: the Gordon Riots, return to rage, and reinventing a cure. -- D©♭j© vu all over again?: the Gordon riots; Bedlam revisited, restoration of order, and a trial on trial -- Repeal, no Popery, and the Gordon Riots: destruction and the Puritan redivivus -- Renovating the language of cultural regress -- Church, state, and political causation -- Strategies of defense and alternative responses -- "What is to depose the sword?: the return of order, debate, arrest, trial, and consequences -- The Trial of Lord George Gordon for treason -- 7. A very near thing: state terrorism, the fury of the aggrieved, and incompatibility with the safety of millions --A river too far -- The Trials of Lord George Gordon, 1786-1787, and excommunication -- The Trials of Lord George Gordon: libeling France and Britain -- Aftermath: flight, conversion, and sentence -- True colors: Robert Watson's Life of Lord George Gordon -- 8. Coping, repairing, and Dickens' Barnaby Rudge -- How to cope? the world after the Gordon Riots -- Dickens' Barnaby Rudge: to the point a moral but not adorn a tale; the Victorian retrospective and punishment by neglect -- Conclusion, summary, implications -- A brief summary of a long book -- Illustrating Evolution.
Summary:
"Literature, Religion, and the Evolution of Culture, 1660-1780 chronicles changes in contentious politics and religion and their varied representations in British letters from the mid-seventeenth to the late eighteenth century. An uncertain trend toward tolerance and away from painful discord significantly influenced authors who reflected on and enhanced germane aspects of British literary and intellectual life. The movement was stymied during the painful Gordon Riots in June 1780, from which Britain needed to repair itself. Howard D. Weinbrot's broad-ranging interdisciplinary study considers sermons, satire, political and religious polemic, Anglo-French relations, biblical and theological commentary, Methodism, legal history, and the novel. Literature, Religion, and the Evolution of Culture, 1660-1780 analyzes the texts and contexts of several major and minor authors, including Daniel Defoe, Charles Dickens, Olaudah Equiano, Maria De Fleury, Lord George Gordon, Nathaniel Lancaster, Henry Sacheverell, Tobias Smollett, and Edward Synge."--Publisher's website.
ISBN:
1421408600 (electronic)
9781421408606 (electronic)
1421405164 (hardcover : acid-free paper)
9781421405162 (hardcover : acid-free paper)
OCLC:
(OCoLC)810329307
LCCN:
2012035553
Locations:
USUX851 -- Iowa State University - Parks Library (Ames)
UXAX826 -- St. Ambrose University Library (Davenport)
PLAX964 -- Luther College - Preus Library (Decorah)
OIAX792 -- Grinnell College (Grinnell)
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)

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