Poetry and the Making of the English Literary Past, 1660-1781This book explores how the English literary past was made. It charts how antiquarians unearthed the raw materials of the English (or more widely) British tradition; how scholars drafted narratives about the development of native literature; and how critics assigned the leading writers to canons of literary greatness. |
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Contents
The Morphology of a Concept II | 11 |
Making an English Canon | 35 |
Authorial Dictionaries and the Cult of Fame | 63 |
The Canon of PreChaucerian Poetry | 93 |
Dryden and the Idea of a Literary Tradition | 142 |
Teaching English Literature | 169 |
Common terms and phrases
achievement Addison aesthetic Alexander Pope ancient Anglo-Saxon Anne Killigrew anthology antiquarian Aphra Behn Augustan bards Behn belles lettres biography British Chaucer cited claim classical collection concept Cowley creative critics culture Denham Dictionary discourse Dramatic Poesy Druids Dryden earlier earliest early edition eighteenth century England English Literary English literature English Poetry English Poets Essay example Faerie Queene fame figures gothic grammar History of English Ibid idea imagination John Johnson Johnson's Lives Joseph judgement Katherine Philips Lady Langbaine language later Latin learning Letters linguistic literary canon literary history literary past literary tradition London Mary Leapor Milton modern moreover Muse nature original Oxford poem poetic poetry poets polite Pope Pope's praise Preface Provençal remains Rhetoric Romance Samuel Johnson Saxon School seen sense Shakespeare sort soul Spenser Studies taste Thomas Gray Thomas Warton tion tongue transmigration vernacular verse Vicesimus Knox vols Waller William William Enfield Winstanley women writers words