Reconsidering Biography
Contexts, Controversies, and Sir John Hawkins's Life of Johnson
Martine Watson Brownley author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bucknell University Press
Published:10th Nov '11
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
As part of the Samuel Johnson tercentenary commemoration, the University of Georgia Press published the first full scholarly edition of Sir John Hawkins’s Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. (1787). From its inception, Hawkins’s work, arising from a close relationship with Johnson that spanned over forty-five years, challenged certain adulatory views of Johnson and has continued to raise interesting critical questions about both Johnsonian biography and the genre of biography generally. Reconsidering Biography collects new essays that explore Hawkins’s biography of Johnson within its historical, political, legal, and personal contexts. More particularly, this volume considers how Hawkins’s approach to recording the Life of Johnson opens up broader questions about early modern biography and its relationship with eighteenth-century trends in aesthetics, politics, and historiography. These sophisticated and informed essays on a curious and often vexed friendship, and its literary offspring, supply a colorful and expansive view of the role of life-writing in the eighteenth-century literary imagination.
Reconsidering Biography splendidly illuminates an unjustly neglected eighteenth-century literary figure, musicologist, editor, and biographer Sir John Hawkins. Martine Watson Brownley oversees a collection of essays penned by a distinguished collection of contributors who focus primarily upon Hawkins' most enduring contribution to British literature, his Life of Johnson-an important study that has been historically eclipsed by Boswell's Life of Johnson. The momentum generated by these crisp and luminous essays, in combination with the recent publication of O M Brack's critical edition of Hawkins' Life of Johnson, should stimulate a revival of critical interest in Hawkins. -- Anthony W. Lee, author of Mentoring Relationships in the Life And Writings of Samuel Johnson
Though James Boswell is the most famous of Samuel Johnson's biographers, he was not the first; the honor of writing the first full-length biography belongs to Sir John Hawkins, whose Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. appeared in 1787. But Boswell succeeded in drawing the all limelight, and Hawkins's life of Johnson had not been published unabridged since the 18th century. That changed in 2009, when O M Brack's magisterial edition of The Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. (CH, Feb'10, 47-3021) promised to inaugurate a new era of scholarly interest in Hawkins. With the present title, that new phase has begun. This, the first-ever collection of essays on Hawkins, includes contributions from distinguished senior scholars of 18th-century British literature and explores Hawkins's theory and practice of biography, his attitude toward the poet Richard Savage, his take on Johnson's politics, and his knowledge of the law. All the contributors also argue for Hawkins's importance and do so in language accessible to every reader. Hawkins will likely remain a minority taste, and few undergraduates will consult a book such as this, but libraries serving advanced scholars should own a copy. Summing Up: Recommended. * CHOICE *
ISBN: 9781611483833
Dimensions: 239mm x 162mm x 18mm
Weight: 431g
196 pages