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Aesthetics of contingency
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01 June 2018

LITERARY CRITICISM / General, Literature: history and criticism, HISTORY / Social History, Social and cultural history
'For a work concerned to muddy critical waters, Aesthetics of Contingency is admirably clear, and its arguments broadly convincing.'
Taylor & Francis Online
'Aesthetics of Contingency is admirably clear, and its arguments broadly convincing. Augustine’s study is a salutary reminder of something too often overlooked: that poets and writers did not usually consider themselves ambassadors for the ideals of whatever literary period posterity has since consigned them to – and that the contingencies of history always blind writers in any given moment to the outcomes of a future that seems to us so self-evident.'
The Seventeenth Century
Introduction: remapping early modern literature
1. ‘He saw a greater Sun appear’: waiting for the apocalypse in Milton’s Poems 1645
2. ‘We goe to heaven against each others wills’: revising Religio Medici in the English Revolution
3. ‘But Iconoclastes drawn in little’: making and unmaking a Whig Marvell
4. ‘It had an odde promiscuous tone’: Lord Rochester and Restoration modernity
5. ‘Transprosing and Transversing’: religion, revolution, and the end of history in Dryden’s late works
6. Coda
Index