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The Citizen of the World

The Citizen of the World

The Citizen of the World

Oliver Goldsmith
James Watt, University of York
January 2025
Available
Hardback
9781108479141
$200.00
USD
Hardback
USD
eBook

    The Citizen of the World is a highly readable yet deceptively sophisticated text, using the popular eighteenth-century device of the imaginary observer. Its main narrator, the Chinese philosopher Lien Chi Altangi, draws on traditional ideas of Confucian wisdom as he tries (and sometimes fails) to come to terms with the commercial modernity and spectacle of imperial London. Goldsmith explores a moment of economic and social transformation in Britain and at the same time engages with the ramifications of a global conflict, the Seven Years' War (1756–63). He also uses his travelling Chinese narrator as a way of indirectly addressing his own predicament as an Irish exile in London. This edition provides a reliable, authoritative text, records the history of its production, and includes an introduction and explanatory notes which situate this enormously rich work within the political debates and cultural conflicts of its time, illuminating its allusiveness and intellectual ambition.

    • Provides a reliable, authoritative text of Goldsmith's The Citizen of the World and records differences of copy-text from other variants
    • Provides extensive explanatory footnotes to the text that contextualize Goldsmith's work and enhance readers' ability to appreciate it
    • Includes a substantial introduction that discusses the production of the work and its reception from the moment of its publication to the present

    Product details

    January 2025
    Hardback
    9781108479141
    996 pages
    223 × 147 × 57 mm
    1.46kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction
    • The Citizen of the World
    • Textual introduction
    • Bibliographic descriptions, emendations, and collations
    • Hyphenated line-endings
    • Bibliography
    • Index.
      Contributors
    • Oliver Goldsmith
    • Editor
    • James Watt , University of York

      James Watt is Director of the Centre for Eighteenth Century Studies at the University of York. He is the author of British Orientalisms, 1759–1835 (Cambridge University Press, 2019) and Contesting the Gothic: Fiction, Genre, and Cultural Conflict, 1764–1832 (Cambridge University Press, 1999).