The Great Age of the English Essay An Anthology from Addison to De Quincey Denise Gigante

Format:
Paperback
Publication date:
09 Sep 2008
ISBN:
9780300141962
Dimensions:
464 pages: 228 x 152 x 33mm
Illustrations:
1 map

From the pens of spectators, ramblers, idlers, tattlers, hypochondriacs, connoisseurs, and loungers, a new literary genre emerged in eighteenth-century England: the periodical essay. Situated between classical rhetoric and the novel, the English essay challenged the borders between fiction and non-fiction prose and helped forge the tastes and values of an emerging middle class. This authoritative anthology is the first to gather in one volume the consummate periodical essays of the period. Included are the "Spectator" co-founders Joseph Addison and Richard Steele, literary lion Samuel Johnson, and Romantic recluse Thomas De Quincey, addressing a wide variety of topics from the oddities of virtuosos to the private lives of parrots and the fantastic horrors of opium dreams.In a lively and informative introduction, Denise Gigante situates the essayists in the context of the contemporary Republic of Letters and highlights the stylistic innovations and conventions that distinguish the periodical essay as a literary form. Critical notes on the essays, a chronology, descriptions and a map of key London sites, and a glossary of eighteenth-century English usage complete the anthology - a uniquely pleasurable survey of the golden era of British essays.

Denise Gigante is associate professor of English at Stanford University and the author of Taste: A Literary History, published by Yale University Press.

"This collection puts the reader into the warm, snug world of the periodical essay as it self-consciously develops over two centuries. I'm not sure when I've had so much pure reading pleasure."--Cynthia Wall, University of Virginia