Johnson's Critical Presence Johnson's Critical Presence
Studies in Early Modern English Literature

Johnson's Critical Presence

Image, History, Judgment

    • $48.99
    • $48.99

Publisher Description

Samuel Johnson remains one of the most frequently discussed and cited of the eighteenth-century critics; but historians of criticism have invariably interpreted his work within conventions that have allowed for little evaluative commerce between the needs of the critical present and the voices of the critical past. Smallwood's argument is that Johnson's alienation from the modern critical scene stems in part from historians' tendency to tell the story of criticism as a narrative of improvement. The image of Johnson conceived by his antagonists in the eighteenth century has been perpetuated by romanticism, by nineteenth-century representational routines and mediated to the present day, most recently, by varieties of 'radical theory'. In Johnson's Critical Presence Smallwood offers a new account of Johnson's major critical writings conceived according to a different kind of historical potential. He suggests that the historicization of eighteenth-century criticism can best be understood in the light of the 'dialogic' and 'translational' historiographies of Collingwood, Gadamer and Ricoeur, and that the explanatory contexts of Johnson's criticism must include poetry in addition to theory; in this his study seeks to displace both the history of ideas as the leading paradigm for the history of criticism and to question the developmental narrative on which it relies. By in-depth analysis of Johnson's response to Shakespeare's plays and to the poetry of Abraham Cowley, Smallwood constructs a non-reductive context of emotional experience for Johnson's criticism. This embraces the dynamic satirical caricatures by James Gillray of Johnson as critic, the irony of Johnson's critical affinities with the major romantics, and is set against twentieth-century responses to the literary 'canon'. Smallwood argues that not only Johnson's emotional sensitivities, but also the ironic voices within the critical text itself, must be fully appreciated before Johnson's current relevance, or even his historical value, can be grasped.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2017
July 5
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
190
Pages
PUBLISHER
Taylor and Francis
SELLER
Taylor & Francis Group
SIZE
1.6
MB

More Books Like This

Domestick Privacies Domestick Privacies
2021
Empson, Wilson Knight, Barber, Kott Empson, Wilson Knight, Barber, Kott
2014
Mentoring in Eighteenth-Century British Literature and Culture Mentoring in Eighteenth-Century British Literature and Culture
2016
Shakespeare and the Eighteenth Century Shakespeare and the Eighteenth Century
2016
Samuel Johnson and the Impact of Print Samuel Johnson and the Impact of Print
2021
Double Vision Double Vision
2008

More Books by Philip Smallwood

The Literary Criticism of Samuel Johnson The Literary Criticism of Samuel Johnson
2023
Ridiculous Critics Ridiculous Critics
2014

Other Books in This Series

Sterne’s Whimsical Theatres of Language Sterne’s Whimsical Theatres of Language
2017
Mock-Heroic from Butler to Cowper Mock-Heroic from Butler to Cowper
2017
The Discourse of Sovereignty, Hobbes to Fielding The Discourse of Sovereignty, Hobbes to Fielding
2017
Enlightenment and Romance in James Macpherson’s The Poems of Ossian Enlightenment and Romance in James Macpherson’s The Poems of Ossian
2017
English Travel Narratives in the Eighteenth Century English Travel Narratives in the Eighteenth Century
2017
Thomas Durfey and Restoration Drama Thomas Durfey and Restoration Drama
2017