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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Marcus Wood (, Senior Lecturer, University of West Indies, Mona, Jamaica)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Clarendon Press Dimensions: Width: 14.40cm , Height: 2.60cm , Length: 22.30cm Weight: 0.629kg ISBN: 9780198112785ISBN 10: 0198112785 Pages: 336 Publication Date: 28 July 1994 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsIntroduction - The potatoes speak for themselves ; advertising, politics and parody 1710-1780' Eaton, Spence and modes of radical subversion in the Revolutionary Era; radicals and the law - blasphemous libels and the three trials of William Hone; radical puffing - parodic advertising and newspapers; The Political House that Jack Built - children's publishing and political satire; conclusion - satire, radicalism and radical Romanticism. Appendix: a transcription of the original manuscript version of The Late John Wilkes's Catechism of a Ministerial Member .Reviews"`Marcus Wood's book is an important addition to recent work on popular radicalism in the romantic period...uncovering of a ""satirical inheritance"" is central to his iportant argument about the historical self-conciousness of radical culture...There is no doubting his claim to have stressed the daring and even joyous nature of much radical propaganda and to have examined that work in its own terms and not as a poor cousin to the canon. That job has been carried out with an admirable combination of enthusiasm and precision.' Review of English Studies ``a marvellously rich study, concentrating on the work of William Hone and George Cruikshank ... Marcus Wood's excellent book suggests further questions abou the consumption of revolutionary taste.' Times Literary Supplement' Library 17:4 1995 `richly illustrated study' International Review of Social History `The background materials alone that Radical Satire and Print Culture provides is worth the price of admission to the carnival world of radical satire that this book persuasively reconstructs...The rich anecdotal scene Wood constructs gains momentum into a thoroughly persuasive argument, or series of arguments,that detail the way in which the radical press waged a linguistic war against the government.' Prose Studies Scholars of the more flexibly defined eighteenth century tend to work accross disciplines, looking at continuities and seeking to reconstruct cultural history...Wood's Radical Satire is a significant contribution to that reconstruction...radical Satire is so deeply grounded in archival research and so well informed by critical intelligence that it is one of the most important studies of verbal and visual satires during the period 1700-1822. It is also a very significant historical study of the genre of parody during the long eighteenth century. `valuable and study ... Wood's achievement in presenting the work of Spence and Hone within the framework of the traditions they inherited is undeniable, and his work will be essential for any future understanding of the cultural world in which Romanticism existed.' P.M.S. Dawson, University of Manchester, Romanticism `an important addition to recent work on popular radicalism in the Romantic period ... There is ... no doubting his claim to have 'stressed the daring and even joyous nature of much radical propaganda' and to have 'examined that work in its own terms and not as a poor cousin to the canon'. That job has been carried out with an admirable combination of enthusiasm and precision.' John Whale, University of Leeds, Review of English Studies, Vol. XLVII, No. 188, Nov '96" Historians of British popular radicalism have paid too little attention to the satiric element: to how radicals used humor to undermine established authority. Marcus Wood has done much to redress this deficiency... --American Historical Review<br> Marcus Wood's book is an important addition to recent work on popular radicalism in the romantic period...uncovering of a satirical inheritance is central to his iportant argument about the historical self-conciousness of radical culture...There is no doubting his claim to have stressed the daring and even joyous nature of much radical propaganda and to have examined that work in its own terms and not as a poor cousin to the canon. That job has been carried out with an admirable combination of enthusiasm and precision. Review of English Studies 'a marvellously rich study, concentrating on the work of William Hone and George Cruikshank ... Marcus Wood's excellent book suggests further questions abou the consumption of revolutionary taste.' Times Literary Supplement Library 17:4 1995 richly illustrated study International Review of Social History The background materials alone that Radical Satire and Print Culture provides is worth the price of admission to the carnival world of radical satire that this book persuasively reconstructs...The rich anecdotal scene Wood constructs gains momentum into a thoroughly persuasive argument, or series of arguments,that detail the way in which the radical press waged a linguistic war against the government. Prose Studies Scholars of the more flexibly defined eighteenth century tend to work accross disciplines, looking at continuities and seeking to reconstruct cultural history...Wood's Radical Satire is a significant contribution to that reconstruction...radical Satire is so deeply grounded in archival research and so well informed by critical intelligence that it is one of the most important studies of verbal and visual satires during the period 1700-1822. It is also a very significant historical study of the genre of parody during the long eighteenth century. valuable and study ... Wood's achievement in presenting the work of Spence and Hone within the framework of the traditions they inherited is undeniable, and his work will be essential for any future understanding of the cultural world in which Romanticism existed. P.M.S. Dawson, University of Manchester, Romanticism an important addition to recent work on popular radicalism in the Romantic period ... There is ... no doubting his claim to have 'stressed the daring and even joyous nature of much radical propaganda' and to have 'examined that work in its own terms and not as a poor cousin to the canon'. That job has been carried out with an admirable combination of enthusiasm and precision. John Whale, University of Leeds, Review of English Studies, Vol. XLVII, No. 188, Nov '96 Historians of British popular radicalism have paid too little attention to the satiric element: to how radicals used humor to undermine established authority. Marcus Wood has done much to redress this deficiency... --American Historical Review Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |