The Pleasures of the Imagination: English Culture in the Eighteenth Century

The Pleasures of the Imagination: English Culture in the Eighteenth Century

by JohnBrewer (Author)

Synopsis

This work explores English culture and its origins. It questions how it was that at the end of the 17th century, there was almost no native English tradition in painting, the theatre, music or publishing, yet by the end of the 18th century, England had one of Europe's richest cultures. The book blends details from little-known sources with a series of character portraits to present a picture of a flourishing culture. The reader meets figures from all strata of 18th-century English society including: the novelist Samuel Richardson; the engraver and political radical, Thomas Bewick; the composer John Marsh; Dr Johnson; Sancho, the Duke of Montagu's black footman; Anna Larpent, the censor of books and plays; and the mysterious poetic milkwoman of Bristol . The author introduces the chaos of a literary auction in a London coffee house, the endless scheming for funds and favour within the Royal Academy and the life of self-gratification led by the Dilettantes. He also explores how the revolutions in France and America led to political agitation among England's artists, a state of affairs that the British state viewed with increasing nervousness.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 752
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: HarperCollins
Published: 22 May 1997

ISBN 10: 0002555379
ISBN 13: 9780002555371

Media Reviews
'If you want to understand how English culture reinvented itself in the 18th century, read The Pleasures of the Imagination. John Brewer's brilliant work is itself a great teeming Vauxhall Gardens of a book: an exuberant festival of ideas and incidents, a commotion of colour and texture. Like all really original achievements it makes us sharply rethink things we supposed we knew welol, but it does so with humour and humanity; and through the text runs Brewer's remarkable intellect - forceful, lucid and penetrating.' SIMON SCHAMA