The Pen and the People: English Letter Writers 1660-1800
Autor Susan Whymanen Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 mar 2011
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780199602186
ISBN-10: 0199602182
Pagini: 398
Ilustrații: 34 black and white images
Dimensiuni: 163 x 233 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.65 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0199602182
Pagini: 398
Ilustrații: 34 black and white images
Dimensiuni: 163 x 233 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.65 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
The book is triumphantly successful. Our understanding of the culture and mentality of late Stuart and Georgian England is both broader and deeper after her work...a highly satisfying book.
Impressive...breaks significant new ground.
The originality of The Pen and the People lies in the cavalcade of writers used by Whyman to reclaim a vanished social world.
Engaging...[and] provocative... The striking case studies of The Pen and the People, as well as the substantial archival body out of which they emerge, will certainly require a revision of the history of eighteenth-century literacy. In addition, for scholars of the period's popular and literary print cultures, new and important questions have been raised about the role of the pen and the many humble people who wielded it in disseminating and shaping those cultures.
Whyman's work is important for challenging established views on popular literacy in the period. She is to be commended for the conscientious, exhaustive nature of her research...Whyman has uncovered valuable family archives...which 'give voice' to the historically obscure and with a thrilling immediacy as, through these documents penned with no thought of publication, we are allowed the illicit pleasure of eavesdropping on words not meant for our ears, of glimpsing the lives of individuals who lived over two hundred years ago.
This is a fascinating book. Susan Whyman is to be applauded for following one excellent social history with another.
Important...exceedingly well researched...valuable
A richly researched book...Whyman has woven a history of the importance of letter writing at this time, and a portrait of a people being formed through a democratizing popular culture of letter writing.
As with Whyman's earlier book of the Verney family ... the strength of this one lies in the detailed and imaginative exposition of documentary sources, the close reading of texts, and the sympathetic engagement with people who are brought to life either as individuals or composites
As well as students of literary culture, historians will find this book valuable as a guide to epistolary sources.
Impressive...breaks significant new ground.
The originality of The Pen and the People lies in the cavalcade of writers used by Whyman to reclaim a vanished social world.
Engaging...[and] provocative... The striking case studies of The Pen and the People, as well as the substantial archival body out of which they emerge, will certainly require a revision of the history of eighteenth-century literacy. In addition, for scholars of the period's popular and literary print cultures, new and important questions have been raised about the role of the pen and the many humble people who wielded it in disseminating and shaping those cultures.
Whyman's work is important for challenging established views on popular literacy in the period. She is to be commended for the conscientious, exhaustive nature of her research...Whyman has uncovered valuable family archives...which 'give voice' to the historically obscure and with a thrilling immediacy as, through these documents penned with no thought of publication, we are allowed the illicit pleasure of eavesdropping on words not meant for our ears, of glimpsing the lives of individuals who lived over two hundred years ago.
This is a fascinating book. Susan Whyman is to be applauded for following one excellent social history with another.
Important...exceedingly well researched...valuable
A richly researched book...Whyman has woven a history of the importance of letter writing at this time, and a portrait of a people being formed through a democratizing popular culture of letter writing.
As with Whyman's earlier book of the Verney family ... the strength of this one lies in the detailed and imaginative exposition of documentary sources, the close reading of texts, and the sympathetic engagement with people who are brought to life either as individuals or composites
As well as students of literary culture, historians will find this book valuable as a guide to epistolary sources.
Notă biografică
Susan E. Whyman returned to the academic world after a career that encompassed the publishing, editing, and library professions. She received both M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in British History from Princeton University. She is a fellow of the Royal Historical Society has been a visiting scholar at Wadham College, Oxford and the Huntington Library, San Marino California. Whyman lectures and publishes widely, both in England and the U.S., on letters and British Culture.