Behold the Hero: General Wolfe and the Arts in the Eighteenth Century

Forside
McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 10. nov. 1997 - 328 sider
McNairn analyses representations of Wolfe in both popular culture and high art, from mass-produced ceramics to Benjamin West's famous painting of the death of Wolfe, from popular songs to the writings of Oliver Goldsmith, Horace Walpole, Tobias Smollett, Thomas Godfrey, Benjamin Franklin, and William Cowper. He argues that Wolfe became the embodiment of British patriotism and the superiority of the English way of life, and that the multitude of literary and visual works about Wolfe, which primarily focus on his death, were created in an environment in which legends of inspiring, politically persuasive heroics were much in demand. Behold the Hero will be of interest to historians of eighteenth-century England and America, art historians, material historians, and students of eighteenth-century English literature and drama.

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Innhold

1 Up Up with Roast Beef
3
2 Sorrow Turned into Joy
7
3 The Glorious Catastrophe
20
4 Too Short Was His Life But Immortal His Deeds
40
5 They Vote a Monument of Lasting Fame
62
6 A Coat and Waistcoat Subject
91
7 Ardent for Fame
109
8 A Revolution in Art
125
10 Lively and Impressive Instruction
165
11 The Front Face Is No Likeness at All
184
12 Wolfe Now Detached and Bent on Bolder Deeds
205
The Realism Was Overpowering
234
Birth and Death Dates of Individuals Discussed in the Text
245
Notes
253
Index
303
Opphavsrett

9 It Was He Who Had Immortalized Wolfe
144

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