The Field of Imagination
Thomas Paine and Eighteenth-Century PoetryOne of Americas Founding Fathers, Thomas Paine is best remembered as the pamphleteer who inspired the American Revolution. Yet few also know him as an eighteenth-century poet of considerable repute. In The Field of Imagination, Scott Cleary offers the first book on Paines poetry, exploring how poetry written both by and about Paine is central to understanding his development as a political theorist. Despite his claim in The Age of Reason that he was abandoning poetry because it led too much into the “field of imagination,” Paine never completely left poetry behind. He took advantage of his position as editor of the Pennsylvania Magazine to situate his poetry in relation to the magazines tacit support of American independence. He drew on two British poets, James Thomson and Charles Churchill, to provide revealing epigraphs for his major early works in support of that independence, and in turn he himself became an influence on early American poets such as Joel Barlow and Philip Freneau. Paines poetry has until now been largely relegated to the status of scholarly curiosity. But whether through his own poetry, his thoughts on the place and function of poetry in the Age of Reason, or his deep influence on the poetry of the early American republic, Paines involvement in poetical craft provides a lens onto the unique and tempestuous literary culture of the eighteenth century. ISBN: 9780813942933, 0813942934
The Field of Imagination Thomas Paine and Eighteenth-Century Poetry Ebook (hebook.shop)
$25.00
Scott M. Cleary
Category: 2019
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