High and Low Culture

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William Hogarth 016
The literature, and particularly, the poetic satire of the late seventeenth and early eighteenth century is obsessed with the distinction between high and low art forms, and with shoring up the frontier between genuine literature, and mere ephemeral hack work. It is the period that, critics have argued, sees the invention of the category of ‘literature’: that is, the idea that some select native literary texts could be compared with classical greats. The rest, by implication, would never stand the test of a week, let alone centuries of literary history. Yet it was also a period in which we see the creative exploitation of low cultural forms, literary works whose effect was dependent upon the juxtaposition of high and low within the same text. Read more
# Title Description Contributor
11 Paradise Lost. A Poem in ten books. [1667] ebook version of Paradise Lost. A Poem in ten books. [1667]
12 Select Scotish ballads.: [pt.1] ebook version of Select Scotish ballads.: [pt.1]
13 The Journal to Stella With preface, introduction and notes by George A. Aitken.
14 The Beggar's Opera As it is acted at the Theatre-Royal in Lincolns-Inn-Fields. The second edition: to which is added…
15 The Rime of the Ancient Mariner / illustrated by Gustave Doré [1798]
16 Lyrical Ballads, with other poems
17 Gulliver's Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World
18 MacFlecknoe : a poem By J. Dryden. With Spencer's ghost; being a satyr concerning poetry. By J. Oldham Publisher Details…
19 The Dunciad
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