<p><i>Fables of Modernity</i> assumes that the eighteenth century was indeed England's first 'modern' century and it proceeds to explore the ramifications of that modernity in the literary culture of the period.</p>
- Brian Cowan, Yale University, H-Albion
<p>In constructing two forms of 'other,' the woman and the non-European, Brown argues that eighteenth-century England turned to material culture for metaphors to represent the modern: the city sewer which emblematizes the metropolis in Swift's 'Description of a City Shower': the torrents and oceans that represent fate in texts such as Johnson's <i>The Vanity of Human Wishes</i> and in works by Dryden, Pope, and others; finance and the fable of Lady Credit; capitalism; the native prince; and pets that symbolize the nonhuman being. These marginally literary texts document the invention of cultural myths of modernity, which are the triumph of capitalism, urbanization, commercialization, and the historical differentiation of today from yesterday.</p>
- Barbara M. Benedict, Trinity College, Studies in English Literature
<p>In essence, Brown's cultural fables are rich metaphorical themes rooted in significant social and historical processes.... Brown's last chapter, on the relationship between the animal and the human, is particularly fascinating, especially her account of the growing popularity of pets during the rise of England's bourgeois commercial society.</p>
Choice
<p>Laura Brown is one of the most productive and influential literary critics today. Over the last two decades she has shaped eighteenth-century studies much as Stephen Greenblatt has shaped Renaissance studies.</p>
- Blakey Vermeule, Northwestern University, Modern Language Quarterly
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Laura Brown is John Wendell Anderson Professor and Chair of the English Department at Cornell University. She is author, most recently, of Ends of Empire: Women and Ideology in Early Eighteenth-Century English Literature, also from Cornell.