Unfelt : The Language of Affect in the British Enlightenment /

"Offers a new account of feeling in British Enlightenment literature, showing how writers discreetly evoke a hidden layer of affect that supports and intensifies our strongly felt passions and sentiments"--

Wedi'i Gadw mewn:
Manylion Llyfryddiaeth
Prif Awdur: Noggle, James (Awdur)
Fformat: Electronig eLyfr
Iaith:Saesneg
Cyhoeddwyd: Ithaca, New York : Cornell University Press, 2020.
Cyfres:Book collections on Project MUSE.
Pynciau:
Mynediad Ar-lein:Full text available:
Tagiau: Ychwanegu Tag
Dim Tagiau, Byddwch y cyntaf i dagio'r cofnod hwn!
Tabl Cynhwysion:
  • Introduction : unfelt affect
  • The insensible parts of Locke's essay
  • David Hartley's ghost matter
  • Vivacity and insensible association : Condillac and Hume
  • Sentiment and secret consciousness : Haywood and Smith
  • Unfeeling before sensibility
  • External and invisible
  • Insensible against involuntary in Burney
  • Austen as coda
  • The force of the thing : unfelt moeurs in French historiography
  • The insensible revolution and Scottish historiography
  • Gibbon in history
  • The embrace of unfeeling
  • Mandeville and the other happiness
  • Feeling untaxed
  • The money flow
  • Invisible versus insensible
  • Epilogue : insensible emergence of ideology.