Swift’s Politics
Modern scholarship has represented Jonathan Swift as both an Old Whig and a non-Jacobite Tory. Ian Higgins’ contextual reassessment of Swift’s political writing and recorded opinion considers the interpretative problems they present. It explores the consonance of Swift’s political writing with militant Jacobite Tory writing on affairs of Church and State, and demonstrates Swift’s dissimilarity from the Old Whig writers with whom modern criticism has misleadingly identified him. Swift\'s writings of the 1690s, during the last four years of Queen Anne’s reign, and after the Hanoverian succession are shown to contain Jacobitical political implications when examined in their context in the ‘paper wars’ of the period. Higgins concentrates on the partisan meanings of the great satires A Tale of a Tub and Gulliver\'s Travels, and represents Swift (as he was read by his contemporaries) as a disaffected High Church Anglican extremist with Jacobite inclinations.
• Concentrates on Swift’s major and most popular works, including Gulliver’s Travels • Gives an original reading of the literary evidence for Swift’s political convictions, a topic hotly contested by specialists • Historians of political thought are interested in this topic, as well as literary scholars
ContentsPreface; List of abbreviations; 1. Swift’s political character; 2. Revolution, reaction and literary representation: Swift’s Jacobite Tory contexts; 3. The politics of A Tale of a Tub; 4. The politics of Gulliver’s Travels; Bibliography; Index.
Review‘An exceptionally learned and persuasive study.’ Brean S. Hammond, University College of Wales, Aberystwyth
- Forlag: Cambridge University Press
- Utgivelsesår: 2006
- Kategori: Teori
- Lagerstatus: Ikke på lagerVarsle meg når denne kommer på lager
- Antall sider: 247
- ISBN: 9780521025683
- Innbinding: Heftet