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Mania and literary style: the rhetoric of enthusiasm from the Ranters to Christopher Smart
Clement Hawes
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Frontmatter
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Acknowledgments (page xi)
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Introduction: Mania as rhetoric (page 1)
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PART I: DEFIANT VOICE
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1 "Howle, you great ones": enthusiastic subjectivity as class rhetoric (page 25)
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2 "A huge loud voice": levelling and the gendered body politic (page 50)
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3 Strange acts and prophetic pranks: apocalypse as process in Abiezer Coppe (page 77)
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PART II: PATRICIAN DIAGNOSIS
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4 Return to madness: mania as plebeian vapors in Swift (page 101)
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PART III: CHALLENGING LIMINALITY
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5 Scribe-evangelist: popular writing and enthusiasm in Smart's Jubilate Agno (page 129)
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6 Double jeopardy: the provenance and reception of Jubliate Agno (page 155)
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7 Smart's bawdy politic: misogyny and the second Age of Horn in Jubliate Agno (page 179)
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8 Smart's poetics of place: myth versus utopia in Jubliate Agno (page 206)
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Epilogue: Beyond pathology (page 230)
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Index (page 236)
Journal Abbreviation | Label | URL |
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MP | 97.2 (Nov. 1999): 277-280 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/439199 |
MLR | 93.2 (Apr. 1998): 473-474 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/3735373 |
A | 29.3 (Autumn 1997): 488-489 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/4051692 |
Citable Link
Published: 1996
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
- 9781139085656 (ebook)
- 9780521022026 (paper)
- 9780521550222 (hardcover)