A Subject for Taste: Culture in Eighteenth-century EnglandHambledon and London, 2005 - 272 من الصفحات In the eighteenth century England became the richest and most powerful country in the world. From being a country divided by religious and political conflict, and in the shadow of France, England and the English became confident and self-assured. A Question for Taste is a rounded portrait of English culture in the eighteenth century. Not only a matter of leading writers, from Swift and Pope to Dr Johnson and Sheridan, or of artists from Hogarth to Reynolds, there was also room for popular ballads, political doggerel, pornographic verse and vigorous satirical cartoons. Taste in architecture ranged from great houses with gardens landscaped by Capability Brown to the changed use of domestic space in towns. Jeremy Black looks at the both the wealth of cultural activity in the period and at the changing patronage of and market for books, art, architecture, music and consumer goods. |
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الصفحة 8
... Whig control was restored , and the work was staged anew , while Rowe's Lady Jane Grey ( 1715 ) offered in the per- son of Lady Jane a model of Protestant constancy and pathos in opposition to the wiles of the Catholic Queen Mary I ...
... Whig control was restored , and the work was staged anew , while Rowe's Lady Jane Grey ( 1715 ) offered in the per- son of Lady Jane a model of Protestant constancy and pathos in opposition to the wiles of the Catholic Queen Mary I ...
الصفحة 9
... Whig hero William III as depicted in the 1701 play by the Whig Nicholas Rowe . The theatre therefore acted out cur- rent events , while the ministry deployed troops in Hyde Park to overawe London . Poetry was also partisan to an extent ...
... Whig hero William III as depicted in the 1701 play by the Whig Nicholas Rowe . The theatre therefore acted out cur- rent events , while the ministry deployed troops in Hyde Park to overawe London . Poetry was also partisan to an extent ...
الصفحة 28
... Whig John Hughes , in contrast , wrote An Ode for the Birthday of Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales ( 1716 ) , as Caroline then was . He was the beneficiary of party patronage , being appointed Secretary to the Commissions of the ...
... Whig John Hughes , in contrast , wrote An Ode for the Birthday of Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales ( 1716 ) , as Caroline then was . He was the beneficiary of party patronage , being appointed Secretary to the Commissions of the ...
المحتوى
Home and Abroad | 211 |
Notes | 237 |
Selected Further Reading | 259 |
حقوق النشر | |
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Abbey activity aesthetic Alexander Pope Alongside appeared architecture artistic Baroque became Beggar's Opera Britain British Castle Howard century Charles church Classical comedy concerts criticism culture decoration depicted designed Duke Earl edition eighteenth Eighteenth-Century elite emphasis England English example fashion French gardens genre George George III Gothic Gothic fiction Gothic novels Handel Henry Henry Fielding History Hogarth houses important included interest Italian Jacobite James John Johnson landscape later literary literature London Lord major Mary Leapor middling orders modern moral newspapers novels opera Oxford painters painting Palladian Park particularly patronage patrons period picturesque play poem poet poetry political popular portraits printed published reflected religious response Robert Robert Adam Rococo role Royal Academy Samuel seen sentimental Shakespeare Sherborne Castle social society songs Stafford Chronicle stage Stourhead style taste theatre theme Thomas towns Walpole Whig William William Hogarth William Kent women writers wrote