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Melincourt [Kietas viršelis]

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Edited by (Cleveland State University),
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Melincourt (1817), Thomas Love Peacock's only three-volume novel, is also his most comprehensive work. In it, he explores a broad range of controversies: the dangers of 'paper money'; British consumers' complicity in slavery; the inequities of the current system of parliamentary representation; the problem of differentiating between human beings and other animals; and, most centrally, the question of whether and how the human condition might be improved. Peacock's brilliant synthesis of courtship novel and quest romance can only be fully appreciated against its colourful and fraught historical background, and Gary Dyer expertly equips readers with the historical and literary awareness required to recognise it as one of Peacock's most stimulating works. Vividly illuminating its remarkable plot – from the suitors' courtship of Anthelia Melincourt to the rescue party comprised of Sylvan Forester, Mr Fax and the chivalrous 'oran outang' Sir Oran Haut-ton – this edition makes Melincourt more accessible than ever before.

This is the first scholarly edition of Thomas Love Peacock's most ambitious and comprehensive satire, a novel brilliantly engaged with myriad early nineteenth-century controversies. Alongside an authoritative text, this edition features an introduction and explanatory notes that expertly situate Melincourt in its historical and literary contexts.

Recenzijos

'With their meticulous notes, rigorous documentation of textual variants and generous contextual appendices (including two unperformed, unpublished farces that Peacock drew on for Headlong Hall), these fine new volumes in the Cambridge Edition of the Novels of Thomas Love Peacock get us closer than ever to the nuances of his satire.' Thomas Keymer, the Times Literary Supplement

Daugiau informacijos

This first scholarly edition expertly situates Thomas Love Peacock's most ambitious satirical novel in its historical and literary contexts.
List of illustrations
ix
General Editor's preface xi
Acknowledgements xxi
Chronology xxii
List of abbreviations
liv
Introduction lix
MELINCOURT
1(306)
I Anthelia
5(6)
II Fashionable Arrivals
11(8)
III Hypocon House
19(4)
IV Redrose Abbey
23(6)
V Sugar
29(7)
VI Sir Oran Haut-ton
36(14)
VII The Principle of Population
50(5)
VIII The Spirit of Chivalry
55(5)
IX The Philosophy of Ballads
60(8)
X The Torrent
68(7)
XI Love and Marriage
75(8)
XII Love and Poverty
83(5)
XIII Desmond
88(12)
XIV The Cottage
100(8)
XV The Library
108(8)
XVI The Symposium
116(12)
XVII Music and Discord
128(6)
XVIII The Stratagem
134(5)
XIX The Excursion
139(8)
XX The Sea-Shore
147(4)
XXI The City of Novote
151(9)
XXII The Borough of Onevote
160(9)
XXIII The Council of War
169(6)
XXIV The Barouche
175(9)
XXV The Walk
184(6)
XXVI The Cottagers
190(4)
XXVII The Anti-Saccharine Fete
194(6)
XXVIII The Chess Dance
200(8)
XXIX The Disappearance
208(4)
XXX The Paper-Mill
212(7)
XXXI Cimmerian Lodge
219(10)
XXXII The Deserted Mansion
229(5)
XXXIII The Phantasm
234(5)
XXXIV The Churchyard
239(4)
XXXV The Rustic Wedding
243(7)
XXXVI The Vicarage
250(6)
XXXVII The Mountains
256(4)
XXXVIII The Fracas
260(3)
XXXLX Mainchance Villa
263(18)
XL The Hopes of the World
281(10)
XLI Alga Castle
291(8)
XLII Conclusion
299(8)
Appendix: Peacock's Preface of 1856 307(4)
Note on the text 311(3)
Emendations and variants 314(24)
Ambiguous line-end hyphenations 338(2)
Explanatory notes 340(192)
Select bibliography 532
Gary Dyer is Professor of English at Cleveland State University. He is author of British Satire and the Politics of Style, 1789-1832 (Cambridge University Press, 1997) and many articles dealing with Romantic literature, book history, and literature and law. He is currently writing Lord Byron on Trial: Literature and the Law in the Romantic Period.