Style and the nineteenth-century British critic : sincere mannerisms
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Bibliographic Information
Style and the nineteenth-century British critic : sincere mannerisms
(Nineteenth century series)
Ashgate, c2008
- Other Title
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Style and the 19th-century British critic
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [171]-183) and index
HTTP:URL=http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0718/2007020026.html Information=Table of contents only
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In analyzing the nonfiction works of writers such as John Wilson, J. S. Mill, De Quincy, Ruskin, Arnold, Pater, and Wilde, Jason Camlot provides an important context for the nineteenth-century critics' changing ideas about style, rhetoric, and technologies of communication. In particular, Camlot contributes to our understanding of how new print media affected the Romantic and Victorian critic's sense of self, as he elaborates the ways nineteenth-century critics used their own essays on rhetoric and stylistics to speculate about the changing conditions for the production and reception of ideas and the formulation of authorial character.Camlot argues that the early 1830s mark the moment when a previously coherent tradition of pragmatic rhetoric was fragmented and redistributed into the diverse, localized sites of an emerging periodicals market. Publishing venues for writers multiplied at midcentury, establishing a new stylistic norm for criticism-one that affirmed style as the manifestation of English discipline and objectivity.
The figure of the professional critic soon subsumed the authority of the polyglot intellectual, and the later decades of the nineteenth century brought about a debate on aesthetics and criticism that set ideals of Saxon-rooted 'virile' style against more culturally inclusive theories of expression.
Table of Contents
- General Editor's preface
- Introduction: sincere mannerisms
- The character of the periodical press
- The origins of modern earnest
- The downfall of authority and The New Magazine
- Thomas de Quincey's periodical rhetoric
- The political economy of style: John Ruskin and critical truth
- The Victorian critic as naturalizing agent
- The style is the man: style theory in the 1890s
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index.
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