- Format
- Bog, hardback
- Engelsk
- 527 sider
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Beskrivelse
Public and private morality as focus in writings of Samuel Johnson Given Samuel Johnson's lifelong concern with problems of human morality, it is not surprising-in an age when such writers as Defoe, Swift, Pope, Goldsmith, and Burke were highly politically conscious-to find Johnson frequently turning to matters of both public and private morality. Donald J. Greene presents a collection of Johnson's writings with a political emphasis: his early anti-Walpolian pamphlets Marmor Norfolciense and A Complete Vindication of the Licensers of the Stage, and various journalistic squibs; an abridgment of the debate on the offer of the Crown to Oliver Cromwell; the articles on the Seven Years' War and related matters, such as the notorious trial and execution of Admiral Byng; and the four pamphlets of the 1770s-The False Alarm, Thoughts on . . . Falkland's Islands, The Patriot, and Taxation No Tyranny. An introduction addresses Johnson's politics, and full annotation provides historical context.
Detaljer
- SprogEngelsk
- Sidetal527
- Udgivelsesdato10-09-1977
- ISBN139780300015935
- Forlag Yale University Press
- FormatHardback
- Udgave0
Størrelse og vægt
10 cm
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