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Impolite Periodicals: Reading for Rudeness in the Eighteenth Century: Transits: Literature, Thought & Culture, 1650-1850

Editat de Emrys D. Jones, Adam James Smith, Katarina Stenke Contribuţii de Anthony Pollock, Jennifer Batt, Claire Knowles, Richard Squibbs, Jennifer Buckley, Laura Davies, Amélie Junqua, Charlotte Roberts Cuvânt după de Manushag Powell
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 13 ian 2026 – vârsta ani
Studies of the eighteenth-century periodical have long tended to understand the form according to the period’s own insistence on adhering to and promoting politeness. In contrast, this collection reads for impoliteness, revealing a more nuanced, granular, and dynamic view of eighteenth-century periodicals such as Addison and Steele’s popular The Spectator, and a fuller sense of their value within the societies that produced and consumed them. By inverting the traditional focus, this volume promotes a new history of the periodical characterized not as highbrow gatekeeper of literary taste, but as incongruent, idiosyncratic, and impolite. Impolite Periodicals thus brings together a range of perspectives on eighteenth-century periodical publication, not simply to argue that periodicals could be impolite, but to explore how readings of their potential impoliteness might affect our understanding of their literary and social significance. This collection relishes and lingers on signs of rudeness, inconsistency, impurity, and failure.

With an afterword by Manushag N. Powell.

Published by Bucknell University Press. Distributed worldwide by Rutgers University Press.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781684485765
ISBN-10: 1684485762
Pagini: 234
Ilustrații: 9 color images and 2 B-W images
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.05 kg
Editura: Bucknell University Press
Colecția Bucknell University Press
Seria Transits: Literature, Thought & Culture, 1650-1850


Notă biografică

EMRYS D. JONES is a senior lecturer in eighteenth-century literature and culture at King's College London.

ADAM JAMES SMITH is a senior lecturer in eighteenth-century literature at York St. John University in the United Kingdom.

KATARINA STENKE is a lecturer in eighteenth-century literature at the University of Greenwich in London.

Cuprins

Editors’ Note  vii
Introduction  1
Emrys D. Jones, Adam James Smith, Katarina Stenke
PART ONE: Polite Agendas
1 Situating Civility: Shaftesbury, Reformist Ridicule, and the Case of the Several Tatlers  17
Anthony Pollock
2 Joseph Addison, Richard Steele, and [Im]politeness After The Spectator  33
Adam James Smith
3 Polite Impostures: Addison’s Orientalist Spectators  49
Katarina Stenke
PART TWO: Impolite Spaces
4 “A Little Chasm in Conversation”: Politeness and Faction in Political Periodicals of the 1730s  71
Emrys D. Jones
5 Originality, Obligation, and Offense in The British Magazine, 1746–1751  86
Jennifer Batt
6 “The Witty Wink, and He! He! He!”: Impolite Poetry in the Late-Eighteenth-Century Newspaper  101
Claire Knowles
PART THREE: Impolite Discourses
7 Conscience Is a Pair of Breeches: Terrae Filius Periodicals, 1707–1763  117
Richard Squibbs
8 “A Time When Banter Ought to Cease”: Roasting, Jesting, and Bantering Readers  130
Jennifer Buckley
9 “The World Is One Undistinguished Wild”: James Boswell and the Hypochondriack Self  143
Laura Davies
PART FOUR: Impolite Legacies
10 The Polished Read and Impolite Waste of The Spectator  161
Amélie Junqua
11 Addison’s Errors  180
Charlotte Roberts
Afterword  194
Manushag N. Powell
Acknowledgments  199
Bibliography  201
Notes on Contributors  215
Index  217

Recenzii

“This excellent book productively agitates traditional thinking about periodicals in the first half of the eighteenth century. Alive to the multiple cultural, commercial, and political stakes of politeness and impoliteness, it allows us to take eighteenth-century periodicals on their own terms, in all their vitality and messiness.”

“Delving the attractions and rhetorical potentials of impoliteness, this volume exposes the pleasures and anxieties polite periodicals found in their more unruly impulses, revealing the impolite instincts undergirding polite agendas, the impolite spaces pressuring authorship, and the discourteous discourses and legacies that upend soothing narratives of civility.”

Descriere

Impolite Periodicals brings together a range of perspectives on eighteenth-century periodical publication, not simply to argue that periodicals, such as Addison and Steele’s popular The Spectator, could be impolite, but to explore how readings of their potential impoliteness might affect our understanding of their literary and social significance.