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Horace Walpole's Letters

Masculinity and Friendship in the Eighteenth Century

Horace Walpole's Letters cover

Horace Walpole's Letters

Masculinity and Friendship in the Eighteenth Century

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Description

In looking closely at Horace Walpole's Correspondence, George E. Haggerty shows how these letters, when taken in aggregate, offer an astonishingly vivid account of the vagaries of eighteenth-century masculinity. Walpole talks about himself obsessively: his wants, his needs, his desires; his physical and mental pain; his artistic appreciation and his critical responses. It is impossible to read these letters and not come away with a vivid impression of a complex personality from another age. Haggerty examines the ways in which Walpole presents himself as an eighteenth-century gentleman, and considers his personal relationships, his needs and aspirations, his emotionalism and his rationality—in short, his construction of himself—in order to see what it tells us about the age in general and more specifically, about masculinity in an era of social flux.

This study of Walpole and his epistolary relations offers a unique window into both the history of masculinity in the eighteenth century and the codification of friendship as the preeminent value in western culture. Recent studies have tried to rewrite Walpole in a twenty-first century mold while this work looks at the writer and the ways in which he constructs himself and his relations, not in hopes of uncovering a lurid secret, but rather in pursuit of the figure that he created and that has fascinated generations of readers and writers since the eighteenth century.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction: Horace Walpole's Epistolary Relations
Part 2 Part One: Epistolarity
Chapter 3 Chapter One: Horace Walpole's Epistolary Friendships
Chapter 4 Chapter Two: Horace Walpole on the Grand Tour
Chapter 5 Chapter Three: Strawberry Hill: Architecture, Friendship, and the Erotics of Collecting
Part 6 Part Two: Correspondents
Chapter 7 Chapter Four: Illness and Intimacy in the Letters between Horace Walpole and William Cole
Chapter 8 Chapter Five: Art, Politics, and Friendship in the Letters between Horace Walpole and Horace Mann
Chapter 9 Chapter Six: Walpole and Women: The Countess of Upper Ossory and Mary Berry
Chapter 10 Conclusion

Product details

Published May 12 2011
Format Hardback
Edition 1st
Extent 186
ISBN 9781611480108
Imprint Bucknell University Press
Dimensions 9 x 6 inches
Series Transits: Literature, Thought & Culture, 1650–1850
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

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Environment: Staging