How he saw it: visual satire in the writings of Joseph Woolley
As a writer, Joseph Woolley was a satirist, or so it has been claimed. He exercised a satiric imagination with his pen in six surviving volumes of diaries and accounts kept between 1800 and 1815. In his writing, satire was a mode, or disposition, not a form, visual or otherwise. The satiric connecti...
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
2021
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Schlagworte: | |
Zusammenfassung: | As a writer, Joseph Woolley was a satirist, or so it has been claimed. He exercised a satiric imagination with his pen in six surviving volumes of diaries and accounts kept between 1800 and 1815. In his writing, satire was a mode, or disposition, not a form, visual or otherwise. The satiric connections between life and literature, between a print, a comic song, a novel, and a workingman’s writing, are framed entirely by the historian’s knowledge of these forms and genres. Except of course in the case of Woolley and Tom Jones. He bought its four volumes, and the evidence of his text, in the high comedy of his justicing room scenes at Gervase Clifton’s house, is that he read it, enjoyed it, and shaped his own writing style by it. That’s the kind of evidence a historian wants. |
Beschreibung: | Illustrationen |
ISBN: | 978-0-367-25601-2 |
Internformat
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520 | 3 | |a As a writer, Joseph Woolley was a satirist, or so it has been claimed. He exercised a satiric imagination with his pen in six surviving volumes of diaries and accounts kept between 1800 and 1815. In his writing, satire was a mode, or disposition, not a form, visual or otherwise. The satiric connections between life and literature, between a print, a comic song, a novel, and a workingman’s writing, are framed entirely by the historian’s knowledge of these forms and genres. Except of course in the case of Woolley and Tom Jones. He bought its four volumes, and the evidence of his text, in the high comedy of his justicing room scenes at Gervase Clifton’s house, is that he read it, enjoyed it, and shaped his own writing style by it. That’s the kind of evidence a historian wants. | |
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spelling | Steedman, Carolyn 1947- Verfasser (DE-588)172384206 aut How he saw it visual satire in the writings of Joseph Woolley Carolyn Steedman 2021 Illustrationen txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier As a writer, Joseph Woolley was a satirist, or so it has been claimed. He exercised a satiric imagination with his pen in six surviving volumes of diaries and accounts kept between 1800 and 1815. In his writing, satire was a mode, or disposition, not a form, visual or otherwise. The satiric connections between life and literature, between a print, a comic song, a novel, and a workingman’s writing, are framed entirely by the historian’s knowledge of these forms and genres. Except of course in the case of Woolley and Tom Jones. He bought its four volumes, and the evidence of his text, in the high comedy of his justicing room scenes at Gervase Clifton’s house, is that he read it, enjoyed it, and shaped his own writing style by it. That’s the kind of evidence a historian wants. Woolley, Joseph 1770-1840 (DE-588)1234188325 gnd rswk-swf Satire (DE-588)4051752-4 gnd rswk-swf Woolley, Joseph 1770-1840 (DE-588)1234188325 p Satire (DE-588)4051752-4 s DE-604 year:2021 pages:25-38 History and art history / edited by Nicholas Chare and Mitchell B. Frank New York ; London, 2021 Seite 25-38 Routledge research in art history (DE-604)BV047123575 978-0-367-25601-2 |
spellingShingle | Steedman, Carolyn 1947- How he saw it visual satire in the writings of Joseph Woolley Woolley, Joseph 1770-1840 (DE-588)1234188325 gnd Satire (DE-588)4051752-4 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)1234188325 (DE-588)4051752-4 |
title | How he saw it visual satire in the writings of Joseph Woolley |
title_auth | How he saw it visual satire in the writings of Joseph Woolley |
title_exact_search | How he saw it visual satire in the writings of Joseph Woolley |
title_exact_search_txtP | How he saw it visual satire in the writings of Joseph Woolley |
title_full | How he saw it visual satire in the writings of Joseph Woolley Carolyn Steedman |
title_fullStr | How he saw it visual satire in the writings of Joseph Woolley Carolyn Steedman |
title_full_unstemmed | How he saw it visual satire in the writings of Joseph Woolley Carolyn Steedman |
title_short | How he saw it |
title_sort | how he saw it visual satire in the writings of joseph woolley |
title_sub | visual satire in the writings of Joseph Woolley |
topic | Woolley, Joseph 1770-1840 (DE-588)1234188325 gnd Satire (DE-588)4051752-4 gnd |
topic_facet | Woolley, Joseph 1770-1840 Satire |
work_keys_str_mv | AT steedmancarolyn howhesawitvisualsatireinthewritingsofjosephwoolley |