Samuel Johnson and the Culture of PropertyCambridge University Press, 28.09.1999 г. Kevin Hart traces the vast literary legacy and reputation of Samuel Johnson. Through detailed analyses of the biographers, critics and epigones who carefully crafted and preserved Johnson's life for posterity, Hart explores the emergence of what came to be called 'The Age of Johnson'. Hart shows how late seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century Britain experienced the emergence and consolidation of a rich and diverse culture of property. In dedicating himself to Johnson's death, Hart argues, James Boswell turned his friend into a monument, a piece of public property. Through subtle analyses of copyright, forgery and heritage in eighteenth-century life, this study traces the emergence of competing forms of cultural property: a Hanoverian politics of property engages a Jacobite politics of land. Kevin Hart places Samuel Johnson within this rich cultural context, demonstrating how Johnson came to occupy a place at the heart of the English literary canon. |
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Страница 2
... later , the Old Pretender , they had little choice but to endorse William III as King de facto and to protect their interests as best they could . The Tories ' ' ideology of order ' , as H. T. Dickinson calls it , was under threat from ...
... later , the Old Pretender , they had little choice but to endorse William III as King de facto and to protect their interests as best they could . The Tories ' ' ideology of order ' , as H. T. Dickinson calls it , was under threat from ...
Страница 3
... later the same group found themselves disadvantaged by government restrictions on trade with the American colonies . The brief period of living in harmony with the ministry , under the leadership of William Pitt , must have seemed like ...
... later the same group found themselves disadvantaged by government restrictions on trade with the American colonies . The brief period of living in harmony with the ministry , under the leadership of William Pitt , must have seemed like ...
Страница 11
... Later in the day , they passed Temple - bar where the impaled heads of the rebel Scotch Lords were a grisly reminder of the Forty - Five , and Goldsmith slyly whispered the line back to Johnson with a different emphasis , Forsitan et ...
... Later in the day , they passed Temple - bar where the impaled heads of the rebel Scotch Lords were a grisly reminder of the Forty - Five , and Goldsmith slyly whispered the line back to Johnson with a different emphasis , Forsitan et ...
Страница 12
... later than 1762 , though , he has accepted a pension of £ 300 a year from George III , which for the first time in his life frees him from toiling for the booksellers but which also brings him a considerable amount of censure from the ...
... later than 1762 , though , he has accepted a pension of £ 300 a year from George III , which for the first time in his life frees him from toiling for the booksellers but which also brings him a considerable amount of censure from the ...
Страница 13
... later , in 1767 , James Boswell , writing to Giuseppe Baretti , fulsomely characterises their mutual friend as ' the illustrious Philosopher of this age Mr Samuel Johnson ' , using ' philosopher ' as Johnson had defined it , as ' a man ...
... later , in 1767 , James Boswell , writing to Giuseppe Baretti , fulsomely characterises their mutual friend as ' the illustrious Philosopher of this age Mr Samuel Johnson ' , using ' philosopher ' as Johnson had defined it , as ' a man ...
Съдържание
1 | |
11 | |
CHAPTER 2 The Age of Johnson | 39 |
CHAPTER 3 Property lines | 70 |
CHAPTER 4 Subordination and exchange | 101 |
CHAPTER 5 Cultural properties | 129 |
CHAPTER 6 Everyday life in Johnson | 156 |
CONCLUSION Property contract trade and profits | 180 |
Notes | 184 |
Bibliography | 223 |
Index of persons | 242 |
Index of subjects | 244 |
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Age of Johnson bard biography booksellers Boswell's Boswellian Britain Carlyle character claim Clarendon Press commerce contemporary conversation Critical Croker cultural property David David Garrick David Hume diary Dictionary Donald Dr Johnson Edinburgh Edmond Malone Edmund Burke eighteenth century England English essay everyday Fingal Frances Burney Gaelic genius George Greene Hebrides hero Hester Piozzi Hester Thrale Highlands Hill's historians Hugh Blair Hume idea individual intro J. C. D. Clark Jacobite James Boswell James Macpherson John Johnson's death Johnson's writings Johnsonian journal Journey Kevin Hart language later letters literary literature Lives London Lord mind monument narrative Oxford Poems of Ossian poetry Poets political Pottle preface published question Rambler remarks Samuel Johnson Scotland Scots Scottish sense social society story Stuart subordination Thomas Thrale Tory Tour trade University Press vols William word wrote