This book offers a thoroughgoing literary analysis of William Cobbett as a writer. Leonora Nattrass explores the nature and effect of Cobbett's rhetorical strategies, showing through close examination of a broad selection of his polemical writings (from his early American journalism onwards) the complexity, self-consciousness and skill of his stylistic procedures. Her close readings examine the political implications of Cobbett's style within the broader context of eighteenth-and early nineteenth-century political prose, and argue that his perceived ideological and stylistic flaws - inconsistency, bigotry, egoism and political nostalgia - are in fact rhetorical strategies designed to appeal to a range of usually polarized reading audiences. This re-reading revises a critical concensus that Cobbett is an unselfconscious populist whose writings reflect rather than challenge the ideological paradoxes and problems of his time.
ISBN: | 9780521033428 |
Publication date: | 1st February 2007 |
Author: | Leonora Nottingham Trent University Nattrass |
Publisher: | Cambridge University Press |
Format: | Paperback |
Pagination: | 264 pages |
Series: | Cambridge Studies in Romanticism |
Genres: |
Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900 |