The Textual Culture of English Protestant Dissent 1720-1800
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:17th Dec '15
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Religious dissenters and their literary and social heritage are the principal subjects of this book. At its heart is a group of English men whose activities were local, transcontinental and circum-Atlantic. Drawing on letters, lecture notes, manuscript accounts of academies, and a range of printed texts and paratexts The Textual Culture of English Protestant Dissent 1720-1800 explores the connections between dissent, education, and publishing in the eighteenth century. By considering Isaac Watts and Philip Doddridge in relation to their mentors, students, friends, and readers it emphasizes the importance they and their associates attached to personal relationships in their private interactions and in print. It argues that this contributed to a distinctive literary style as well as particular modes of textual production for moderate, orthodox dissenters which reached beyond their own community to address and influence global discourses about education, enlightenment, and history. The book's focus on 'textual culture' foregrounds relationships between forms as well as considering texts as they existed in one form or another. In examining textual culture, this book emphasises adaptation, transformation, fluidity and communality: it approaches the human relationships that make texts (including friendships, reading communities, intellectual exchange and business arrangements) with as much care as the content of the texts themselves. The book demonstrates that models of family and social authorship among Romantic-era dissenters advanced by Michelle Levy, Daniel White and Felicity James were rooted in the domestic culture at earlier academies and in the example of members of the Watts-Doddridge circle.
Tessa Whitehouse's The Textual Culture of English Protestant Dissent, 1720-1800 offers a careful and interesting account of the efforts of eighteenth-century nonconformists * William Cook Miller, William and Mary Quarterly *
This recent work by Tessa Whitehouse is a refreshing contribution to the history of Dissent. * Simon Lewis, Journal of Religious History, Literature and Culture *
ISBN: 9780198717843
Dimensions: 223mm x 145mm x 21mm
Weight: 450g
266 pages