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Mutuality
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Journal Article
Eighteenth-Century Life (2015) 39 (1): 103–130.
Published: 01 January 2015
... that the new lodge also attracted English Masons. Its rapid growth in London and provincial England was seeded by the bigotry and condescension with which many in England viewed the Irish, but was more a function of the Antients’ social inclusivity and its commitment to mutual support. This resonated not only...
Journal Article
Eighteenth-Century Life (2012) 36 (3): 31–56.
Published: 01 September 2012
... they claimed was unique to this threat. This legal doctrine is a covert presence in William Godwin’s novel Caleb Williams (1794). Ferdinando Falkland, fearing that his secret is about to be revealed by Caleb, accuses him of having “robbed” him, and even though Falkland’s secret is literally murder, the mutual...
Journal Article
Eighteenth-Century Life (2023) 47 (1): 35–62.
Published: 01 January 2023
.... Whereas patronage focused on exchanges resulting in mutual economic benefit, friendship typically involved disinterested, mutual service based on shared interests. Orrery seized on the notion of instrumentality inherent in friendship to exchange his patronal role for a place on the translation team Lennox...
Journal Article
Eighteenth-Century Life (2014) 38 (3): 30–63.
Published: 01 September 2014
... of Judaism and, after one foray, never wrote on Jewish subjects again. In their mutual inability to probe Judaism, Edgeworth and Lazarus revealed key facets of the “Jewish Question” at the turn of the nineteenth century. Hampered by her own cultural barriers, like Richard Cumberland before her, and Walter...
Journal Article
Eighteenth-Century Life (2009) 33 (2): 1–44.
Published: 01 April 2009
... endeavor to proceed as if dogs can be considered on the same terms as other kinds of taxable luxuries (devouring resources that might better be devoted to humans), opponents of the tax focus on the bonds of mutual dependency and reciprocal obligation that tie humans and animals together, arguing...
Journal Article
Eighteenth-Century Life (2024) 48 (1): 28–49.
Published: 01 January 2024
... present different and mutually supportive forms of authority. In this case, print is referred to through citation, graphic imitation, and paratextual format, whilst at the same time, the virtuoso scribal acts of transcribing and refining within the volume operate as an alternative index of textual...
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Journal Article
Eighteenth-Century Life (2000) 24 (3): 53–72.
Published: 01 September 2000
... organization, it was distinct from other benefit
organizations in its combination of mutual aid and fraternalism. Friendly
societies were, above all, clubs that promoted a particular notion of group
identity.6 They were also a common feature of both urban and rural life...
Journal Article
Eighteenth-Century Life (2023) 47 (1): 97–101.
Published: 01 January 2023
..., Genovese reads periodicals such as The Spectator , The Tatler , and The Review as advancing an ideology of mutual indebtedness that held the community of credit together. Distinct from rational self-interest, the ideal of mutual indebtedness meant that creditor and debtor were part of a system in which...
Journal Article
Eighteenth-Century Life (2019) 43 (3): 61–85.
Published: 01 September 2019
... for female friendships has yet to be considered.2 Created and rein- forced through the self- fashioning epistolary exchanges and the dedication to mutual virtue emphasized by conduct books, the friendships between women in this text represent a special kind of inseparable bond that with- stands contemporary...
Journal Article
Eighteenth-Century Life (2002) 26 (2): 69–82.
Published: 01 April 2002
... in monarchical discourse
toward a mutual acknowledgement of power and privilege between the ruler
and those in position of civic leadership. The essay is interested in how issues
of authority play out during the public celebrations accompanying the duke’s
passage...
Journal Article
Eighteenth-Century Life (2013) 37 (3): 110–121.
Published: 01 September 2013
... as “the time of physics, whose events are related diachronically
Debating the Secular 1 1 3
purely by efficient causal relations, and synchronically by mutual conditioning”
(Sources, 288). Taylor ties this to other developments: the rise of the punctual...
Journal Article
Eighteenth-Century Life (2016) 40 (2): 157–161.
Published: 01 April 2016
.... Griffith, James
Joyce, and Sergei Eisenstein. What is most distinctive and valuable about An
Archaeology of Sympathy is the way it elucidates “the mutual possibilities opened
up by the encounter” between film and literature, something Chandler inter-
prets in productively formalist terms (xxi). His...
Journal Article
“The Call of the Popular” Revisited; Or, English Literary History's Resistance to Balladry Corrected
Eighteenth-Century Life (2009) 33 (1): 138–143.
Published: 01 January 2009
... tran-
sition toward a modern sensibility.
Ballad Collection, Lyric, and the Canon rightly and innovatively sees lyric
and ballad as interdependent and mutually constructing concepts, especially as
these came respectively to connote individuality and collectivity, the domains
of private...
Journal Article
Eighteenth-Century Life (2016) 40 (3): 68–88.
Published: 01 September 2016
... Defoe. Under both Dav-
enant and Defoe, the newspaper treated trade as “an Affair of Peace” that
78 Eighteenth-Century Life
by no means concerned a scramble for limited resources but rather flour-
ished through the mutual exchange of benefits: “The Language of Nations
one to another is, I...
Journal Article
Eighteenth-Century Life (2008) 32 (2): 110–119.
Published: 01 April 2008
... that emphasizes a mutually exclusive poetic vision
has been addressed, but not really bridged by the scholarship on the Age of
Sensibility.5 Yet, as Fredric Bogel indicates, Blake and Coleridge are “the
two Romantic poets most strongly influenced by the literature of the Eng-
lish Enlightenment” (132...
Journal Article
Eighteenth-Century Life (2022) 46 (2): 30–60.
Published: 01 April 2022
... “ embodied in law,” actually “ensures the creation of a new community . . . based on human trust and ‘generosity,’ mutual respect, and contractual agreement.” 12 For Lauren Caldwell, Congreve's play suggests that “successful legal negotiation rests upon the cornerstone of social engagement.” 13...
Journal Article
Eighteenth-Century Life (2011) 35 (2): 39–75.
Published: 01 April 2011
... possible.13
Social historians have demonstrated the extent to which, throughout
the eighteenth century, marriage helped create and affirm networks of kin-
ship, or as George Booth wrote in 1739, helped provide for the “mutual
Society, Help, and Comfort” of the wider family.14 Whether it was com...
Journal Article
Eighteenth-Century Life (2013) 37 (3): 91–94.
Published: 01 September 2013
... on discourses of exploitation and love, categories that were not as
mutually exclusive as modern readers tend to think.
Eighteenth-Century Life
Volume 37, Number 3, Fall 2013 doi 10.1215/00982601-2325677
Copyright 2013 by Duke University...
Journal Article
Eighteenth-Century Life (2009) 33 (1): 74–82.
Published: 01 January 2009
... envisions includes them
in a culture of “cross-gender mutuality and reciprocity,” even if this “mode of
mutuality” is “sadly wanting in the lives of actual women” (112).
Earla Wilputte’s essay, “‘Too Ticklish to Meddle with’: The Silencing of
the Female Spectator’s Political Correspondents...
Journal Article
Eighteenth-Century Life (2018) 42 (1): 117–120.
Published: 01 January 2018
... that
Piranesi penned, sometimes with collaborators, to complement those images.
Minor argues that this state of affairs has left our conception of Piranesi’s
larger project both denatured and impoverishedÐ that his words and images
were intended to be mutually reinforcing and reciprocally informativeÐ so...
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