Publication

2007-12-31 - University of Delaware Press

Language

English

Word Count

67,250 words, Guess

Page Count

269 pages

Physical Format

Hardcover

Identifiers

  • ISBN-100874139848
  • ISBN-139780874139846
  • Goodreads1679973
  • Library of Congress Control Number2007001069
  • OCLC Control Number78892932
and 3 more
  • Better World Books9780874139846
  • Better World BooksP9-DKU-541
  • Open LibraryOL11119308M

Classifications

  • LCCPR448.S64 R68 2007
  • LCCPR448.S64R68 2007

Description

"The book asks, how could British culture have modernized so rapidly and yet with so little trauma in the eighteenth century? It hypothesizes that one reason was the growth of literature with a built-in range of reading options and the complementary growth of a readership who made active choices about how to read texts. In this climate, the characteristic eighteenth-century literary practice of writers' reinhabiting older texts and genres allowed for conservative surface continuity. At the same time it allowed readers to experience forms of cultural change in their imaginations, as simulations for experimental, familiarizing, and predictive ends in a changing environment. Different readers could apply the works in accord with their needs, desires, and predilections." "Through rigorously historical but not univocal readings of several widely familiar works, the book also argues that this literature does socially constitutive work in a way that differs from commonly made neofoucauldian, marxisant claims. Its (non-cynical) consumer-driven model, in which artworks offer variously instructive make-believe, does not require or invoke transgression, subversion, finger-wagging, or complaisance as means of social efficacy."--Jacket.

Subjects

Other Editions

  • Gleaning Modernity: Earlier Eighteenth-Century Literature and the Modernizing ProcessHardcoverUniversity of Delaware Press2007-12-31

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