Harvard University Press, 1989 Cloth: 978-0-674-30943-2 Library of Congress Classification PR73.E54 1989 Dewey Decimal Classification 801.950941
ABOUT THIS BOOK | REVIEWS
ABOUT THIS BOOK
James Engell has prepared the first broad treatment of eighteenth- and early-nineteenth century British criticism to appear in a generation, presenting the views of scores of writers on a variety of questions, many of which remain live issues today.
While offering major reevaluations of Dryden, Hume, and Johnson, Engell demonstrates that eighteenth-century criticism cannot be represented by just a few major critics or by generalizations about Augustan taste, neoclassical rules, or “common sense.” He presents a complex and highly varied body of theoretical writing and practical application by dozens of critics including Rymer, Addison, Welsted, Ramsay, Hurd, Gerard, Newbery, Campbell, Blair, Beattie, Jeffrey, and Hazlitt. He also analyzes the continued relevance of their critical work, drawing connections with modern writers such as Eliot, Frye, Saussure, Barthes, Culler, Bakhtin, and Lévi-Strauss.
Engell concludes with a stimulating essay on the nature and function of the critical process itself. For students and scholars conversant with modern critical theory, Forming the Critical Mind will offer some surprising and interesting comparisons.
REVIEWS
This is a book of deep learning and bold generalization…the first detailed map of an enormous territory with all the main ranges, rivers, and tributary streams filled in.
-- Times Literary Supplement
This important book is concerned with an important subject, which it handles with authority, learning, and originality.
-- New York Review of Books
A learned and important book that treats, in more copious and wide-ranging detail than any other study now available, the evolution of a major idea in Western culture.
-- Keats-Shelley Journal
Engell brings the light of scholarship to the process by which the idea of ‘imagination’ replaced the Great Chain of Being as ‘a force, an energy’ …A valuable, serious addition to the history of ideas.
-- Kirkus Reviews
Harvard University Press, 1989 Cloth: 978-0-674-30943-2
James Engell has prepared the first broad treatment of eighteenth- and early-nineteenth century British criticism to appear in a generation, presenting the views of scores of writers on a variety of questions, many of which remain live issues today.
While offering major reevaluations of Dryden, Hume, and Johnson, Engell demonstrates that eighteenth-century criticism cannot be represented by just a few major critics or by generalizations about Augustan taste, neoclassical rules, or “common sense.” He presents a complex and highly varied body of theoretical writing and practical application by dozens of critics including Rymer, Addison, Welsted, Ramsay, Hurd, Gerard, Newbery, Campbell, Blair, Beattie, Jeffrey, and Hazlitt. He also analyzes the continued relevance of their critical work, drawing connections with modern writers such as Eliot, Frye, Saussure, Barthes, Culler, Bakhtin, and Lévi-Strauss.
Engell concludes with a stimulating essay on the nature and function of the critical process itself. For students and scholars conversant with modern critical theory, Forming the Critical Mind will offer some surprising and interesting comparisons.
REVIEWS
This is a book of deep learning and bold generalization…the first detailed map of an enormous territory with all the main ranges, rivers, and tributary streams filled in.
-- Times Literary Supplement
This important book is concerned with an important subject, which it handles with authority, learning, and originality.
-- New York Review of Books
A learned and important book that treats, in more copious and wide-ranging detail than any other study now available, the evolution of a major idea in Western culture.
-- Keats-Shelley Journal
Engell brings the light of scholarship to the process by which the idea of ‘imagination’ replaced the Great Chain of Being as ‘a force, an energy’ …A valuable, serious addition to the history of ideas.
-- Kirkus Reviews