Language, Custom and Nation in the 1790S

Language, Custom and Nation in the 1790S Locke, Tooke, Wordsworth, Edgeworth

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Publisher's Synopsis

Language, Custom and Nation in the 1790s shows for the first time how the radical 'Jacobin' poets, and their ideas of a 'revolutionary' poetry, were impelled û even 'invented' û by the seventeenth-century English philosopher John Locke. For too long the revolutionary Romanticism and poetic experiments of the 1790s have been understood as responses to the American and French revolutions or attributed to the intellectual influence of Rousseau. - - Susan Manly counters these assumptions, by tracing threads of influence from Locke's ideas of 'arbitrary' language and tyranny, through Tooke's attacks on terms such as 'majesty' and 'law', to the supposedly 'real language' of Wordsworthian Romanticism. She breaks new ground in establishing Maria Edgeworth's place in Locke's anti-authoritarian tradition, contending that Edgeworth's work, produced in the shadow of the United Irishmen uprising, revives the politicisation of the idea of common language displaced in Wordsworth's neutralizing of Locke's radical impulse in the preface to Lyrical Ballads. Manly's original and engaging book will appeal to scholars of 1790s radicalism, eighteenth-century linguistic theory, women's writing, and the relations between Britain and Ireland.

Book information

ISBN: 9780754658320
Publisher: Ashgate
Imprint: Ashgate
Pub date:
DEWEY: 820.935809033
DEWEY edition: 22
Language: English
Number of pages: 204
Weight: 521g
Height: 234mm
Width: 156mm
Spine width: 19mm