Formation of English Neo-Classical Thought
James William Johnson
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Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Englische Sprachwissenschaft / Literaturwissenschaft
Beschreibung
This book reexamines some of the prevalent critical assumptions about English Neo-Classical thought and literature and tests them by viewing Neo-Classicism within its intellectual tradition and its self-defined limits.
Originally published in 1967.
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English drama, Religio Laici, Thomas Babington Macaulay, Orosius, Jonathan Swift, English poetry, Puritans, Journal of British Studies, English literature, Modern Language Association, The True-Born Englishman, Historiography, Cato the Younger, Literature, G. M. Trevelyan, Livy, Medieval Latin, Persius, Literary criticism, Lucretius, Karl Jaspers, Charles Blount (deist), Lewis Theobald, Medievalism, Casaubon, Sophocles, Mr., Philosophy, Historicism, Herodian, Latin literature, Sir Thomas More (play), Conyers Middleton, Loeb Classical Library, Horace Walpole, Classics, English art, Tragedy, Augustan literature, Suetonius, The Realist, Epicurus, Poetry, Literary theory, Astraea Redux, Epicureanism, Classical language, Roman Government, Absalom and Achitophel, Francis Atterbury, Etymology, Richard Porson, Aeschylus, Restoration literature, The History of England (Hume), Classicism, Lactantius, A Dictionary of the English Language, Tertullian, Thucydides, George Psalmanazar, English Renaissance, Edward Gibbon, Epigram, Oliver Cromwell, Writing, Thomas Tickell, Neoclassicism, Roman historiography, The Dunciad