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Overview"In the years between 1714 and 1724, Jonathan Swift published little. This hiatus in his work is often dismissed as a consequence of personal disillusionment and political disappointment, and studies of Swift commonly move from 1714 to 1724 with barely a mention of his activities in that decade. Consequently, Swift's apparently sudden conversion to a seeming love of, and concern for, Irish rights as espoused in ""The Draper's Letters"" is either left unexplained, or is treated as a further symptom of his bitterness and contempt for English political life. ""An Accidental Patriot"" situates Swift in the context of his political endeavours in the Church of Ireland, especially as demonstrated by the battles between Archbishop William King and the English-appointed authorities. It examines the contemporary economic climate, especially the increasing strains betwen Great Britain's trade goals and the continuing mercantilist structure of Irish economic life, and argues that Swift's writings help expose a fault line in Anglican Irish politics of the early Hanoverian period that was much wider than modern scholarship has traditionally recognized. This examination demonstrates a consistency of purpose on Swift's part, and uses his continuous dedication to the preservation and promotion of the privileges of the Church of Ireland to examine that fissure within contemporary Irish society. The unpublished, overlooked and otherwise neglected writings of Swift, studied in the light of contemporary political and economic events in England and Ireland, reveal a politically astute observer and wise, if wary, commentator on events. His commentary was a logical and entirely consistent move on his part, motivated by no great love for Ireland but by a profound commitment to the ideals of the established Anglican Church. This body of commentary is as revealing of Swift's society as it is of the man himself." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Christopher FauskePublisher: Irish Academic Press Ltd Imprint: Irish Academic Press Ltd Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 23.00cm Weight: 0.476kg ISBN: 9780716527282ISBN 10: 0716527286 Pages: 296 Publication Date: December 2001 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsPrologue - the teasing particularity of Swift's ironies -reflections on the Dean; putting the world in order - when Jonathan Swift met d< @his destiny; we were in danger to be over-run - the church's plea; I had no ill designs - the Dean and his church; vertue in this deluded people - who will save the Irish?; a bubble ... sufficient to do our business - the economy of a province; the struggle for control of rents - the Commons takes on the church; epilogue - the vandals of the present age -the Dean's ironic legacy.ReviewsAuthor InformationChristopher Fauske has his Ph.D from the University of Delaware, where his dissertation was on Jonathon Swift and the Church of Ireland. He is the author of several Irish-literature books, including the Dictionary of Pre-Revival Irish Writers, and is currently an Instructor at Newbury College, Brookline, MA. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |