Front cover image for Britannia's Issue : the Rise of British Literature from Dryden to Ossian

Britannia's Issue : the Rise of British Literature from Dryden to Ossian

Howard D. Weinbrot (Author)
This book chronicles the developing confidence in British national literature from the 1670s to the 1770s. Using many varied historical and literary sources, Professor Weinbrot shows that one of the central trends of eighteenth-century Britain was the movement away from classical towards native values and models.
eBook, English, 1993
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1993
Criticism, interpretation, etc
1 online resource (644 pages)
9780511553554, 9780521325196, 9780521034104, 0511553552, 0521325196, 0521034108
1170740629
Acknowledgments and editorial notes; Introduction: an overview of scope and method; Part I. Contexts: Intellectual, Psychological and National: Prologue to part I; 1. Moderns, ancients and the secular: the limits of southern hegemony; 2. The spiritual: truth was not the inclination of the first ages; 3. An ambition to excel; 4. The making of a modern canon; Part II. Texts Within Contexts. Essaying England: Our Genius, Our Clime: Prologue to part II; 5. Dryden's 'Essay of Dramatick Poesie': the poetics of nationalism; 6. Homeric wars; 7. The 'Pax Romana' and the 'Pax Britannica': the ethics of war and the ethics of trade; 8. 'Windsor Forest' and 'The Rape of the Lock'; Part III. Growing One's Own: The British Ode From Cowley to Gray: Prologue to part III; 9. Greek jockeys and British heroes: the rise and fall of the Pindaric ode; 10. Odes to the nation and the north: Dryden, Collins and Gray; Part IV. Expanding the Borders. Jews and Jesus: This Israel, This England: Prologue to part IV; 11. The house of David and the house of St. George: philosemitism, Hebrews and Handel; 12. Beyond the Hebrew leaven: smart and the God in Christ; Part V. Celts, Germans and Scots: Towards a United Kingdom: Prologue to part V; 13. Celtic Scotland; 14. Ossian in Scotland, Great Britain and modern Europe: joining Britannia's issue; 15. Conclusion. Synthesizing all the nations under heaven; Appendix: the text of Handel's 'Israel in Egypt'; Index.