Poetic genre and economic thought in the long eighteenth century: three case studies

<p>During the eighteenth century, the dominant rhetorical and explanatory power of civic humanism was gradually challenged by the rise of a new organising language in political economy. Political economic thought permitted radically different descriptions of what laudable private and public b...

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Päätekijät: Bucknell, C, Dr Clare Bucknell
Muut tekijät: Womersley, D
Aineistotyyppi: Opinnäyte
Kieli:English
Julkaistu: 2014
Aiheet:
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author Bucknell, C
Dr Clare Bucknell
author2 Womersley, D
author_facet Womersley, D
Bucknell, C
Dr Clare Bucknell
author_sort Bucknell, C
collection OXFORD
description <p>During the eighteenth century, the dominant rhetorical and explanatory power of civic humanism was gradually challenged by the rise of a new organising language in political economy. Political economic thought permitted radically different descriptions of what laudable private and public behaviour might be: it proposed that self-interest was often more beneficial to society at large than public-mindedness; that luxury had its uses and might not be a threat to liberty and political integrity; that landownership was no particular guarantee of virtue or disinterest; and that there was nothing inherently superior about frugality and self-sufficiency. These new ideas about civil society formed the intellectual basis of a large body of verse written during the long eighteenth century (at mid-century in particular), in which poets engaged enthusiastically with political economic arguments and defences of commercial activity, and celebrated the wealth and plenty of Britain as a modern trading nation. The work of my thesis is to examine a contradiction in the way in which these political economic ideas were handled. Forward-looking and confident poetry on public themes did not develop pioneering forms to suit the modernity of its outlook: instead, poets articulated such themes in verse by appropriating and reframing traditional genres, which in some cases involved engaging with inherited moral values and philosophical preferences entirely at odds with the intellectual material in hand. This inventive kind of generic revision is the central interest of the thesis. It aims to describe a number of problematic meeting points between new political economic thought and handed-down poetic formulae, and it will focus attention on some of the ways in which poets manipulated the forms and tropes they inherited in order to manage – and make the most of – the resulting contradictions.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:71e97b4d-c009-487c-8efb-fdb71eefa0802022-03-26T19:46:44ZPoetic genre and economic thought in the long eighteenth century: three case studiesThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:71e97b4d-c009-487c-8efb-fdb71eefa080Intellectual HistoryArchitectureEighteenth-Century Britain and EuropeEarly modern English literature (1550 ? 1780)Economic and Social HistoryCivic & landscape artEconomic historyEthics (Moral philosophy)Political ideologiesEnglish and Old English literatureReception of Classical antiquityLandscapeEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2014Bucknell, CDr Clare BucknellWomersley, D<p>During the eighteenth century, the dominant rhetorical and explanatory power of civic humanism was gradually challenged by the rise of a new organising language in political economy. Political economic thought permitted radically different descriptions of what laudable private and public behaviour might be: it proposed that self-interest was often more beneficial to society at large than public-mindedness; that luxury had its uses and might not be a threat to liberty and political integrity; that landownership was no particular guarantee of virtue or disinterest; and that there was nothing inherently superior about frugality and self-sufficiency. These new ideas about civil society formed the intellectual basis of a large body of verse written during the long eighteenth century (at mid-century in particular), in which poets engaged enthusiastically with political economic arguments and defences of commercial activity, and celebrated the wealth and plenty of Britain as a modern trading nation. The work of my thesis is to examine a contradiction in the way in which these political economic ideas were handled. Forward-looking and confident poetry on public themes did not develop pioneering forms to suit the modernity of its outlook: instead, poets articulated such themes in verse by appropriating and reframing traditional genres, which in some cases involved engaging with inherited moral values and philosophical preferences entirely at odds with the intellectual material in hand. This inventive kind of generic revision is the central interest of the thesis. It aims to describe a number of problematic meeting points between new political economic thought and handed-down poetic formulae, and it will focus attention on some of the ways in which poets manipulated the forms and tropes they inherited in order to manage – and make the most of – the resulting contradictions.</p>
spellingShingle Intellectual History
Architecture
Eighteenth-Century Britain and Europe
Early modern English literature (1550 ? 1780)
Economic and Social History
Civic & landscape art
Economic history
Ethics (Moral philosophy)
Political ideologies
English and Old English literature
Reception of Classical antiquity
Landscape
Bucknell, C
Dr Clare Bucknell
Poetic genre and economic thought in the long eighteenth century: three case studies
title Poetic genre and economic thought in the long eighteenth century: three case studies
title_full Poetic genre and economic thought in the long eighteenth century: three case studies
title_fullStr Poetic genre and economic thought in the long eighteenth century: three case studies
title_full_unstemmed Poetic genre and economic thought in the long eighteenth century: three case studies
title_short Poetic genre and economic thought in the long eighteenth century: three case studies
title_sort poetic genre and economic thought in the long eighteenth century three case studies
topic Intellectual History
Architecture
Eighteenth-Century Britain and Europe
Early modern English literature (1550 ? 1780)
Economic and Social History
Civic & landscape art
Economic history
Ethics (Moral philosophy)
Political ideologies
English and Old English literature
Reception of Classical antiquity
Landscape
work_keys_str_mv AT bucknellc poeticgenreandeconomicthoughtinthelongeighteenthcenturythreecasestudies
AT drclarebucknell poeticgenreandeconomicthoughtinthelongeighteenthcenturythreecasestudies