Cutting Edges: Postmodern Critical Essays on Eighteenth-century SatireThe essays in Cutting Edges examine English satire of the eighteenth century from various theory-based postmodern perspectives. Some examine little-known works that postmodern concerns, such as the role of women and the problems of authorship, have rendered especially interesting; others reconsider familiar works in terms of the latest critical issues. The justification for these investigations is that both satire and postmodern methods are extremely skeptical and acutely aware that language is always ironic - always pointing to the gap between signifier and signified. The approaches in this book include those associated with deconstruction, reception theory, Marxist criticism, the new historicism, and various feminist criticisms, and with such theorists as Derrida, Bakhtin, Goux, and Luhmann. While most of the major figures of eighteenth-century satire - Butler, Rochester, Swift, Pope, Gay, Fielding, Sterne, and Johnson - are represented here, so too are many other interesting writers - Thomas Shadwell, Fannie Burney, Mary Davys, and Elizabeth Hamilton, to name but a few. |
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Contents
Comedy Satire or Farce? Or the Generic Difficulties | 1 |
The Semiotics of Restoration Satire | 23 |
The Case of Thomas Shadwell | 43 |
Power Politics and the Press | 59 |
Butler Swift Sterne | 76 |
Sublimity and the Imagery | 94 |
Satire and Scarcity in the 1690s | 110 |
WoManley Satire and the Stage | 127 |
Reading The Rape of the Lock | 222 |
Augustan Semiosis | 256 |
Skirmishes on | 275 |
Pope the Idiocy of Rural Life | 301 |
The Critique of Capitalism and the Retreat into Art | 320 |
Tautology and Paradox | 335 |
Maria Edgeworths Hibernian High Jinks | 367 |
Elizabeth Hamiltons Modern Philosophers and | 395 |
The Persona as Pretender and the Reader as Constitutional | 159 |
Pharmakon Pharmakos and Aporetic Structure in Gullivers | 181 |
Refusing Patriarchal | 206 |
Contributors | 419 |
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