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Emergent Nation: Early Modern British Literature in Transition, 1660–1714: Volume 3

Offers penetrating, original analyses of the literature of 1660–1714 in relation to generic, ideological, cultural, and local transitions.

Elizabeth Sauer (Edited by)

9781108422680, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 21 February 2019

420 pages, 14 b/w illus.
23.5 x 16 x 2.7 cm, 0.74 kg

'Each essay concludes with suggestions for further reading, and many are accompanied by clear, well reproduced black- and- white illustrations … signal achievements in current early modern scholarship.' Elizabeth Skerpan-Wheeler, Milton Quarterly

The years 1660 to 1714 represent a fraught transitional period, one caught between two now dominant periodization rubrics: early modern and the long eighteenth century. Containing narratives of disruption, restoration, and reconfiguration, Emergent Nation: Early Modern British Literature in Transition, 1660–1714 explores the conjunctions and disjunctions between historical and literary developments in this period, when the sociable, rivalrous textual world of letters registered and accelerated changes. Each of the volume's four parts highlights the relationship of various literary forms to a different kind of transformation - generic, ideological, cultural, or local. The five chapters in each section rigorously probe the conditions that affected the period's literary transformations, and interrogate the traditions that canonical and less established writers inherited, adapted, and often challenged. In making a case for an early mimetically produced English nation, this book, through its concentration on literary evidence and transitions also makes innovative contributions to an understanding of nationalism in the period.

Introduction: national transitions, literary transitions Elizabeth Sauer
Part I. Generic Transitions: 1. Pedantry and party politics: essays in the public sphere Denise Gigante
2. 'Familiar things … made new': epic and mock-epic verse, 1660–1714 Mark Blackwell
3. The satiric contract David Rosen ?and Aaron Santesso
4. Tragedy, comedy, tragicomedy and the incubation of new genres: 1660–1714 Marcie Frank
5. Travel literature and the emergent nation Clement Hawes
Part II. Ideological Transitions: 6. Literature, religion and party politics, 1660–1714 Melinda S. Zook
7. The dissidence of dissent in late seventeenth-century English literature Elizabeth Sauer
8. Power and profit: literature and the English commercial empire, 1651–1714 Ramesh Mallipeddi
9. 'Heaven's center, nature's lap': literary models of nation and empire, 1660–1714 Suvir Kaul
10. Brave new world: a Restoration debate Margaret Kean
Part III. Cultural Transitions: 11. Female wits and the late Stuart stage Bridget Orr
12. Deregulating the libertine mind: wine, wit, and wanton fancy James Steintrager
13. After libertinism: the passions of the polite Christian hero Christopher Tilmouth
14. Chymistry, primary qualities, and empirical knowledge Helen Thompson
15. Information and irony Sean Silver
Part IV. Local Transitions: 16. Nation and environment in Britain, 1660–1705 Robert Markley
17. Creating the territories of recreation: parks, squares, and the exotic in London's little wilderness Kevin L. Cope
18. Early English sinology, 1577–1688 William Poole
19. John Dryden and Anne Killigrew: postmortems on the Restoration Jennifer Brady
?20. In defense of the short eighteenth century: 1714 as year zero Pat Rogers.

Subject Areas: Literary reference works [DSR], Literary studies: c 1500 to c 1800 [DSBD], Literature: history & criticism [DS]

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