Castle of Otranto and the Man of Feeling
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Description
Horace Walpole • Henry Mackenzie The Castle of Otranto and The Man of Feeling A Longman Cultural Edition
Editor: Laura Mandell Series Editor: Susan J. Wolfson
Affordably priced, Longman Cultural Editions present classic works in provocative and illuminating contexts–cultural, critical, and literary. Each Longman Cultural Edition consists of the complete text of a key literary work, supplemented by helpful annotations and followed by contextual materials that reveal the conversations and controversies of its historical moment.
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Laura Mandell is Associate Professor of English and Digital Humanities at Miami University of Ohio. She has published articles about women writers and Romantic poetry in journals such as ELH, MLQ, Studies in Romanticism, European Romantic Review, and, most recently, Victorian Studies and New Literary History. In addition to the present volume, Mandell is general editor of the Poetess Archive Database, a full-text and bibliographic resource, and co-editor of the Romantic Chronology. Her first book, Misogynous Economies, analyzes the relationship between misogyny, literariness, and the canon in eighteenth-century literature.
From the Longman Cultural Editions series, The Castle of Otranto and The Man of Feeling, edited by Laura Mandell, presents a lively pairing of mid-eighteenth century works that mark a watershed in the history of the novel.
These short novels, published within the same decade–Horace Walpole’s The Castle of Otranto (1764) and Henry Mackenzie’s The Man of Feeling (1771)–helped produce the turn from social realism to sentimentality and strangeness that will characterize works of the Romantic era as well as popular novels, Gothic spectacles (including film), and all literary works interested in modern notions of individualism and human sympathy.
Handsomely produced and affordably priced, each Cultural Edition consists of the complete text of an important literary work, reliably edited, headed by an inviting introduction, supplemented by helpful annotations, accompanied by a table of significant dates and a guide for further study, then followed by contextual materials that reveal the conversations and controversies of its historical moment.
One Longman Cultural Edition can be packaged at no additional cost with any volume of The Longman Anthology of British Literature by Damrosch et al, or at a discount with any other Longman textbook.
See all the Longman Cultural Editions at www.ablongman.com/longmanculturaleditions.
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The Introduction explains in broad terms and with concrete formal features how these two novels fit into the history of the development of the novel and anticipate the Romantic era, thus situating students firmly in literary history.
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Texts by writers such as Edmund Burke and Samuel Johnson show both the importance and the fear of sublime horror during the 1760s, and illuminate how Walpole and Mackenzie work through and augment anxieties about the dangerous imagination.
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Short and highly explicated philosophical texts delineate debates about how feeling affects morality.
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Reviews of each novel show the amazing congruence in the adverse critical responses to Gothic and sentimental fiction, acknowledging their immediate and enormous impact on the cultural scene.
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“Marriage, Obedience, Sentiment” section allows students to discern the way that changes in family structure and new social categories fed into the sensibility movement and the Gothic, as well as indicating how gender issues shaped genre and theme.
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“The Gothic Revival and Chivalry” illustrates the Gothic revival in architecture and the antiquarian movement in history to show a reevaluation of Europe’s “dark ages” as technologically deprived but morally superior, inspiring the awe and reverence for the past that is central to both these texts.
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Two contextual sections on “The Sublime, the Supernatural, the Real” and “Cultures of Feeling,” along with parts of the Introduction, give students access to two major points of view, the aesthetics of the sublime and the moral cult of sensibility competing against the ethos of scientific realism that informs the rise of the realistic novel.
From the Longman Cultural Editions series, The Castle of Otranto and The Man of Feeling, edited by Laura Mandell, presents a lively pairing of mid-eighteenth century works that mark a watershed in the history of the novel. These short novels, published within the same decade–Horace Walpole’s The Castle of Otranto (1764) and Henry Mackenzie’s The Man of Feeling (1771)–helped produce the turn from social realism to sentimentality and strangeness that will characterize works of the Romantic era as well as popular novels, Gothic spectacles (including film), and all literary works interested in modern notions of individualism and human sympathy.
List of Illustrations
About Longman Cultural Editions
About This Volume
Introduction
Table of Dates
The Castle of Otranto(1764 )
The Man of Feeling(1771)
Contexts
The Sublime, the Supernatural, the Real
Edmund Burke, A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and the Beautiful
Anna Letitia Aikin [Barbauld], John Aikin, “On the Pleasure Derived from Objects of Terror; with Sir Bertrand, A Fragment”
David Hume, “Of Miracles”
Samuel Johnson, The Rambler No. 4; Preface to Shakespeare
Clara Reeve, The Progress of Romance; Preface to The Old English Baron
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Biographia Literaria
The Gothic Revival and Chivlary
William Chambers, Civil Architecture
John Carter, “An Architect,” Gentleman’s Magazine 1799, 1801
Horace Walpole, Description of . . . Strawberry-Hill
Horace Walpole, George Vertue, Anecdotes of Painting
Alexander Pope, Preface to The Works of Shakespeare
Richard Hurd, Letters on Chivalry and Romance
Walter Scott, An Essay on Chivalry
Marriage, Obedience, Sentiment
William Cobbett, The Parliamentary History of England
Horace Walpole, Memoires of . . . George II
Tobias Smollett, Reign of George II
Thomas Pennant, Of London
Alexander Keith, “Observations on the [Marriage] Act
George Savile, Lord Halifax, Advice to a Daughter
James Fordyce, Sermons for Young Women
Cultures of Feeling
Francis Hutcheson, An Inquiry Concerning the Original of Our Ideas of Virtue or Moral Good
Samuel Richardson, Preface to Pamela
Adam Smith, Theory of Moral Sentiments
Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Confessions
Henry Mackenzie, from The Lounger
Alexander Bicknell, Painting Personified
Laurence Sterne, Tristram Shandy
What the Reviewers Said
Castle of Otranto:
Critical Review, January 1765
Critical Review, June 1765
[John Langhorne], Monthly Review, February 1765
[John Langhorne], Monthly Review, May 1765
Horace Walpole, Letter in Reply to Mme. Du Deffand (March 1767)
Ann Yearsley, “To the Honourable H—E W—E, on Reading The Castle of Otranto” (December 1784)
Anna Letitia Barbauld, “Walpole” (1810)
Walter Scott, “Prefatory Memoir to Walpole” (1823, 1834)
Man of Feeling:
Monthly Review, May 1771
Critical Review, June 1771
London Magazine, August 1771
Town and Country Magazine, August 1771
Scots Magazine, August 1771
Anna Letitia Barbauld, “Mackenzie” (1810)
Walter Scott, “Prefatory Memoir to Mackenzie” (1823)
Further Reading
Additional information
Dimensions | 0.80 × 5.50 × 8.20 in |
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Subjects | Literature, english, higher education, Language Arts / Literacy, Introduction to Literature |