Didactic Literature in England 1500–1800: Expertise Constructed

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Ranging from music to astronomy, gardening to the Bible, this essay collection is the first multi-disciplinary volume to examine a kind of text that was a staple of early modern English publishing: the how-to book. It tackles a wide range of subjects - grammars, music books, gardening manuals, teach-yourself book-keeping - while highlighting the commonalities of diverse texts as didactic works, and situating this material in wider intellectual and material contexts. An introductory essay explores the uses of didactic texts in early modern culture, evaluates their relationships with other literary forms, and establishes the significance of such texts within the cultural history of the period. There follow contributions by an international group of scholars from a broad range of disciplines, including the history of science, literature, lingustics, and musicology. The volume addresses the important issue of how texts that tend to be regarded today as 'non-literary' functioned within early modern literature. It also evaluates relationships between textual prescription and actual practices, and the early modern conception of experience as opposed to knowledge, that presently concern social and cultural historians and historians of science. Drawing attention to non-fictional, didactic texts as opposed to the imaginative and political writings that have been its focus until now, Didactic Literature in England 1500-1800 adds a new dimension to the study of reading, readership and publishing. All in all, it constitutes a substantial contribution to histories of knowledge, of educational processes and practices, and to the history of the book in early modern England.

Author(s): Sara Pennell, Natasha Glaisyer
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2016

Language: English
Pages: 283
City: London

Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
List of Plates
List of contributors
Acknowledgements
1 Introduction
2 The Bible and Didactic Literature in Early Modern England
3 Didactic Sources of Musical Learning in Early Modern England
4 Seventeenth-Century Didactic Readers, Their Literature, and Ours
5 Polite Society and Perceptions of the Sun and the Moon in the Athenian Mercury and the British Apollo, 1691-1711
6 French Conversation or ‘Glittering Gibberish’? Learning French in Eighteenth-Century England
7 The Gardener and the Book
8 Deformity’s Filthy Fingers: Cosmetics and the Plague in Artificiall Embellishments) or Arts best Directions how to preserve Beauty or procure it (Oxford, 1665)
9 Richardson’s Barometer: Colonial Representation in Grammatical Texts
10 Containing the Marvellous: Instructions to Buyers and Sellers
Index