Enlightenment in Ruins

Enlightenment in Ruins
Authors
Griffin, Michael
Publisher
Bucknell University Press
ISBN
9781611485059
Date
2013-08-15T00:00:00+00:00
Size
1.74 MB
Lang
en
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Oliver Goldsmith (1728 1774) moved between the genres and geographies of enlightenment writing with considerable dexterity. As a consequence he has been characterized as a passive purveyor of enlightenment thought, a hack, a harried translator of the French enlightenment for an English audience, an ideological lackey, and a subtle ironist. In poetry, he is either a compliant pastoralist or an engaged social critic. Yet Goldsmith s career is as complex and as contradictory as the enlightenment currents across which he wrote, and there is in Goldsmith s oeuvre a set of themes including his opposition to the new imperialism and to glibly declared principles of liberty which this book addresses as a manifestation of his Irishness. Michael Griffin places Goldsmith in two contexts: one is the intellectual and political culture in which he worked as a professional author living in London; the other is that of his nationality and his as yet unstudied Jacobite politics. Enlightenment in Ruins thereby reveals a body of work that is compellingly marked by tensions and transits between Irishness and Englishness, between poetic and professional imperatives, and between cultural and scientific spheres."