Critics, Values, and Restoration Comedy

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Southern Illinois University Press, 1982 - Drama - 177 pages

Granting that literature delights, Harwood addresses the moral questions that have been hotly debated by critics for the 300 years since Restoration comedy flourished: “In what way does literature teach? How do be­liefs about its effects on audiences shape crit­ics’ responses to and judgment of literature?”

Harwood begins with a survey of the “major rhetorical strategies by which many critics transform themselves, at least mo­mentarily and perhaps unconsciously, into moralists when they deal with restoration comedy.”

Then he places various moral responses in a broader critical context by analyzing ways in which critics have traditionally handled aesthetic problems, which inevitably entail an ethical assessment of literature.

Third, he analyzes the moral dimensions of four controversial Restoration comedies: William Wycherley’s Country Wife; Edward Ravenscroft’s London Cuckolds; Thomas Ot­way’s Souldiers Fortune; and Thomas Shadwell’s Squire of Alsatia.

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Contents

DeepBreathing Sex and Critical Practice
77
Notes
145
Selected Bibliography
163
Copyright

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About the author (1982)

John T. Harwood is Associate Professor of English at the Pennsylvania State University.

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