Designed to complement DeMaria's textbook
British Literature 1640-1789: An Anthology , this critical reader contains seventeen essays by sixteen contemporary literary critics and covers the full range of works printed in the anthology.Acknowledgements.
A Note on the Form of Reference.
1. Areopagitica, Censorship, and the Early Modern Public Sphere: David Norbrook.
2. From 'Milton and the Fit Reader', Sharon Achinstein.
3. 'The Balance of Power in Marvell's Horatian Ode ': Thomas M. Greene.
4. 'Oroonoko's Blackness': Catherine Gallagher.
5. 'Lordly Accents: Rochester's Satire' (1994): Claude Rawson.
6. From Brittania's Issue, 'Dryden's Anne Killigrew : Towards a New Pindaric Political Ode : Howard Weinbrot.
7. Ironic Monologue and 'Scandalous Ambro-dexter Conformity' in Defoe's The Shortest Way with the Dissenters : D. N. DeLuna.
8. 'Strange Complicities: Atheism and Conspiracy in A Tale of a Tub': Roger Lund.
9. From Resemblance and Disgrace, 'The Rape of the Lock as Miniature Epic': Helen Deutsch.
10. From English Women's Poetry 1649-1714, 'Anne Finch: Gender, Politics, and Myths of the Self': Carol Barash.
11. 'The Spirit of Ending in Johnson and Hume': Adam Potkay.
12. From The Muses of Resistance, 'An English Sappho Brilliant, Young and Dead?' Mary Leapor Laughs at the Fathers': Donna Landry.
13. O Lachrymarum Fons: Thomas Gray's Sensibility: George E. Haggerty.
14. 'The Culture of Travesty: Sexuality and Masquerade in Eighteenth-Century England': Terry Castle.
15. From The Literary Genres of Edmund Burke, 'Theater and Counter-Theater in Burke's Reflections on the RevlC%