Fables of Modernity: Literature and Culture in the English Eighteenth Century

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Cornell University Press, 2001 - 273 páginas

Fables of Modernity expands the territory for cultural and literary criticism by introducing the concept of the cultural fable. Laura Brown shows how cultural fables arise from material practices in eighteenth-century England. These fables, the author says, reveal the eighteenth-century origins of modernity and its connection with two related paradigms of difference--the woman and the "native" or non-European.The collective narratives that Brown finds in the print culture of the period engage such prominent phenomena as the city sewer, trade and shipping, the stock market, the commercial printing industry, the "native" visitor to London, and the household pet. In connecting imagination and history through the category of the cultural fable, Brown illuminates the nature of modern experience in the growing metropolitan centers, the national consequences of global expansion, the volatility of credit, the transforming effects of capital, and the domestic consequences of colonialism and slavery.

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Conteúdo

CHAPTER
4
The Fable of the City Sewer
12
ALTERITY
39
CHAPTER 6
46
CHAPTER 2
212
The Orangutang
221
The Fable of Torrents and Oceans
253
INDEX
271
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Sobre o autor (2001)

Laura Brown is John Wendell Anderson Professor and Chair of the English Department at Cornell University. She is author, most recently, of Ends of Empire: Women and Ideology in Early Eighteenth-Century English Literature, also from Cornell.

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