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Fame and Fortune: Sir John Hill and London Life in the 1750s

Editat de Clare Brant, George Rousseau
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 19 dec 2017
This multi-disciplinary essay collection explores the controversial life and achievements of Sir John Hill (1714–1775), a prolific contributor to Georgian England’s literature, medicine and science. By the time he died, he had been knighted by the Swedish monarch and become a household name among scientists and writers throughout Britain and Europe. In 1750s London he was a celebrity, but he was also widely vilified.
Hill, an important writer of urban space, also helped define London through his periodicals and fictions. As well as examining his significance and achievements, this book makes Hill a means of exploring the lively intellectual and public world of London in the 1750s where rivalries abounded, and where clubs, societies, coffee-houses, theatres and pleasure gardens shaped fame and fortunes. By investigating one individual’s intersections with his metropolis, Fame and Fortune restores Hill to view and contributes new understandings of the forms and functionsof eighteenth-century intellectual worlds.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781137580535
ISBN-10: 1137580534
Pagini: 416
Ilustrații: XXIII, 350 p. 30 illus.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 x 27 mm
Greutate: 0.76 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2018
Editura: Palgrave Macmillan UK
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Cuprins

1 Introduction; Clare Brant and George Rousseau.- I HILL & LIVES.-  2 The Biographer’s Tale: Second Thoughts of a Biographer; George Rousseau.- 3    The Propagation of Lives: Sir John Who?; Clare Brant.- 4 Sir John Hill and Friendship; Emrys Jones.- II HILL & LITERATURE.-  5 John Hill and Mary Cooper: A Case Study in Eighteenth-Century Publishing; Beverley Schneller.- 6 “The Ravished Organs of the Attentive Audience”: John Hill and Christopher Smart; Min Wild.- 7  “Unassisted Hill”: Churchill’s Satire and the Fate of the Virtuoso; Adam Rounce.- 8 The Erotic Satires of Sir John Hill; Julie Peakman.- III HILL & PUBLIC PLACES.-  9 The Doctor as Man of Letters:  mid-Georgian Transformations; George Rousseau.-  10 Coffee-house Sociability, Science and Public Life in John Hill’s The Inspector; Markman Ellis.- 11 The Inspector at Large: Sir John Hill’s Interrogation of London Space; Chris Ewers.-IV HILL & SCIENCES.- 12 A Dwarf on Giant’s Shoulders: Hill the Geologist; Christopher J.  Duffin.- 13 Sir John Hill as Botanist: The Vegetable System; Brent Elliott.- 14   John Hill, Exotic Botany and the Competitive World of Eighteenth-Century Horticulture; Sarah Easterby-Smith.

Notă biografică

Clare Brant is Professor of Eighteenth-Century Literature and Culture at King’s College London, UK, where she also co-directs the Centre for Life-Writing Research. She is the author of Eighteenth-Century Letters and British Culture which won the European Society for the Study of English Book Award in 2008.
George Rousseau of the University of Oxford, UK,  is the author of Nervous Acts: Essays on and The Notorious Sir John Hill: The Man Destroyed by Ambition in the Age of Celebrity.

Textul de pe ultima copertă

This multi-disciplinary essay collection explores the controversial life and achievements of Sir John Hill (1714–1775), the prolific contributor to Georgian England’s literature, medicine and science. By the time he died, he had been knighted by the Swedish monarch and become a household name among scientists and writers throughout Britain and Europe.
Hill, an important writer of urban space, also helped define London through his periodicals and fictions. As well as examining his significance and achievements, his vilification and rise to celebrity, this book makes Hill a means of exploring the lively intellectual and public world of London in the 1750s where rivalries abounded, and where clubs, societies, coffee-houses, theatres and pleasure gardens shaped fame and fortunes. By investigating one individual’s intersections with his metropolis, Fame and Fortune restores Hill to view and contributes new understandings of the forms and functions of eighteenth-century intellectual worlds.

Caracteristici

Examines the intellectual world of 1750s London through the prism of the controversial figure Sir John Hill, building upon Rousseau’s important biography Presents the 1750s as an important decade in their own right, as a time of broad metropolitan transformations in response to new knowledge and a burgeoning intellectual city life Grants scholars a deeper understanding of the role played by ‘celebrity’ figures in forming intellectual Georgian London