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The Historical Imagination in Early Modern Britain

The Historical Imagination in Early Modern Britain

The Historical Imagination in Early Modern Britain

History, Rhetoric, and Fiction, 1500–1800
Donald R. Kelley, Rutgers University, New Jersey
David Harris Sacks, Reed College, Oregon
August 2002
Available
Paperback
9780521521239

    This collection of essays by some of the most distinguished historians and literary scholars in the English-speaking world explores the overlap, interplay, and interaction between history and fiction in British imaginative and historical writing from the Tudor period to the Enlightenment. The historians discuss the questions of truth, fiction, and the contours of early modern historical culture, while the literary scholars consider some of the fictional aspects of history, and the historical aspects of fiction, in prose narratives of many sorts. The interests and inquiries of these learned, imaginative, and venturesome scholars cross at many points, casting significant light on and offering numerous insights into the problematic and interdisciplinary areas where 'history' and 'story' meet, interact, and sometimes compete. Despite the theoretical questions posed, the discussions primarily focus on concrete works, including those of Thomas More, John Foxe, Thomas Hobbes, Adam Smith, and Edward Gibbon.

    • Important, imaginative and highly insightful work by some of the top scholars of early modern British history and literature
    • Interdisciplinary - historians and literary scholars address common themes, central questions, and practices shared by the two disciplines
    • Relevance and popularity of problems of truth/fiction, imagination/ memory (or reason) in many fields, role of rhetoric

    Product details

    August 2002
    Paperback
    9780521521239
    392 pages
    236 × 160 × 30 mm
    0.693kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Introduction Donald Kelley and David Harris Sacks
    • 2. Example and truth: Deggory Wheare and the ars historica J. H. M. Salmon
    • 3. Truth, lies and fiction in sixteenth-century Protestant historiography Patrick Collinson
    • 4. Thomas More and the English Renaissance: history and fiction in Utopia Joseph Levine
    • 5. Ancestral and antiquarian: Little Crosby and early modern historical culture Daniel Woolf
    • 6. Murder in Faversham: Holinshed's impertinent history Richard Helgerson
    • 7. Foul, his Wife, the Mayor, and Foul's Mare: anecdote in Tudor historiography Annabel Patterson
    • 8. Thomas Hobbes' Machiavellian moments David Wooton
    • 9. The background of Hobbes' Behemoth Fritz Levy
    • 10. Leviathan, mythic history, and natural historiography Patricia Springborg
    • 11. Adam Smith and the history of private life Mark Phillips
    • 12. Protesting fiction, constructing history Paul Hunter
    • 13. Contemplative heroes and Gibbon's historical imagination Patricia Craddock
    • 14. Experience, truth, and natural history in early English gardening books Rebecca Bushnell.
      Contributors
    • Donald Kelley, David Hams Sacks, J. H. M. Salmon, Patrick Collinson, Joseph Levine, Daniel Woolf, Richard Helgerson, Annabel Patterson, David Wooton, Fritz Levy, Patricia Springborg, Mark Philips, J. Paul Hunter, Patricia Craddock, Rebecca Bushnell

    • Editors
    • Donald R. Kelley , Rutgers University, New Jersey
    • David Harris Sacks , Reed College, Oregon