The Doctrine of the Passions Explain'd and Improv'd
Author : Isaac Watts
Publisher :
Page : 212 pages
File Size : 48,47 MB
Release : 1732
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Isaac Watts
Publisher :
Page : 212 pages
File Size : 48,47 MB
Release : 1732
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Isaac Watts
Publisher :
Page : 202 pages
File Size : 15,47 MB
Release : 1739
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Watts
Publisher :
Page : 200 pages
File Size : 12,84 MB
Release : 1739
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Isaac Watts
Publisher :
Page : 158 pages
File Size : 26,14 MB
Release : 1737
Category : Emotions
ISBN :
Author : Isaac Watts
Publisher :
Page : 200 pages
File Size : 34,73 MB
Release : 1751
Category : Emotions
ISBN :
Author : Stephen H. Gregg
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 208 pages
File Size : 31,25 MB
Release : 2016-05-13
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1317153464
Defoe's Writings and Manliness is a timely intervention in Defoe studies and in the study of masculinity in eighteenth-century literature more generally. Arguing that Defoe's writings insistently returned to the issues of manliness and its contrary, effeminacy, this book reveals how he drew upon a complex and diverse range of discourses through which masculinity was discussed in the period. It is for this reason that this book crosses over and moves between modern paradigms for the analysis of eighteenth-century masculinity to assess Defoe's men. A combination of Defoe's clarity of vision, a spirit of contrariness and a streak of moral didacticism resulted in an idiosyncratic and restless testing of the forces surrounding his period's ideas of manliness. Defoe's men are men, but they are never unproblematically so: they display a contrariness which indicates that a failure of manliness is never very far away.
Author : Geoffrey Sill
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 273 pages
File Size : 36,14 MB
Release : 2006-11-02
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 052102790X
This new study examines the role of the passions in the rise of the English novel. Geoffrey Sill examines medical, religious, and literary efforts to anatomize the passions, paying particular attention to the works of Dr Alexander Monro of Edinburgh, Reverend John Lewis of Margate, and Daniel Defoe, novelist and natural historian of the passions. He shows that the figure of the 'physician of the mind' figures prominently not only in Defoe's novels, but also in those of Fielding, Richardson, Smollett, Burney, and Edgeworth.
Author : Earla Wilputte
Publisher : Springer
Page : 216 pages
File Size : 46,48 MB
Release : 2014-09-04
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1137442050
Providing imaginatively contextualized close readings, this study focuses on three key eighteenth-century writers - Haywood, Hill and Fowke. Wilputte traces the development of the passionate language of these writers whose lives, writing careers, and interests intersected from 1720 to 1724 in the "Hillarian" coterie.
Author : Benedict S. Robinson
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 282 pages
File Size : 31,68 MB
Release : 2021
Category : Drama
ISBN : 0198869177
Passion's Fictions traces the intimate links between literature and the sciences of mind and soul from the age of Shakespeare to the rise of the novel. It chronicles the emergence of new sciences of the passions between the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries, and it argues that this history was shaped by rhetoric that contained the most extensively particularized discourse on the passions, offering principles for moving and affecting the passions of others in concrete social scenes. This rhetoric of the passions centered on narrative as the instrument of a non-theoretical knowledge of the passions in their particularity, predicated on an account of passion as an intimate relation between an impassioned mind and an impassioning world: rhetoric offers a kind of externalist psychology, formalized in the relation of passion to action and underwriting an account of narrative as a means of both moving passion and knowing it. This volume describes the psychology of the passions before the discipline of psychology, tracing the influence of rhetoric on theories of the passions from Francis Bacon to Adam Smith and using that history to read literary works by Shakespeare, Milton, Haywood, Richardson, and others. Narrative offers a means of knowing and moving the passions by tracing them to the events and objects that generate them; the history of narrative practices is thus a key part of the history of the psychology of the passions at a critical moment in its development.
Author : John Baker
Publisher : Manchester University Press
Page : 247 pages
File Size : 37,11 MB
Release : 2018-11-17
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1526123355
This volume explores the notion of the ‘self’ as it was elaborated and expressed by philosophers, novelists, churchmen, poets and diarists in the Enlightenment. The questions raised by the twelve essays and the introduction, explore the unity, diversity and fragility of a recognisably modern self.