
Samuel Johnson: The Arc of the Pendulum offers unique insight into the works of Samuel Johnson by re-considering William Hazlitt's oft-cited comparison between Johnson's prose and a pendulum. In 1819, William Hazlitt condemned Samuel Johnson's prose style as 'a species of rhyming' in which 'the close of the period follows as mechanically as the oscillation of a pendulum, the sense is balanced with the sound'. Predictable, formulaic, and unresponsive, Hazlitt's Johnson was 'incapable of latitude and compromise, a mere automaton who rebounded from one position to its opposite extreme'.This collection of essays focuses on Johnson's works, rather than perceptions of his personality, and argues that Johnson's perceived erratic opinions reflect an understanding of the complexity, instability, and contradictions of the world in which he lived. The volume challenges Hazlitt's influential reading of the Johnsonian pendulum, focusing on the uses and enjoyments of inconsistency, and the varieties of instability, irresolution, and active change which are revealed by and within Johnson.Chapters from a strong team of contributors present new perspectives on Johnson's work, life, and reception. The chapters address questions of style, authority, language, lexicography, and biography across a range of Johnson's writings from the early poetry to the late prose. Johnson emerges from these chapters not as a writer trapped within a set of oppositions, but as one who engages imaginatively and vigorously with flux, dynamism, and inconclusiveness.From the late eighteenth century onwards, to be 'Johnsonian' has typically been made synonymous with firm resolution and trenchant opinion, with polysyllabic excess and a style removed from the exigencies and accidents of ordinary existence. And yet, as this volume suggests, Johnson's life and writings embody the critical and creative play of ideas, a form of interaction with the world which is shaped by instability, contradiction, and combat.
This volume investigates whether Samuel Johnson's prose style and intellectual output should be viewed as rigid and formulaic, or as a dynamic engagement with the complexities and contradictions of his era. Authors Freya Johnston and Lynda Mugglestone curate a collection of essays that challenge William Hazlitt's 1819 characterization of Johnson as a mechanical, pendulum-like thinker. By analyzing Johnson's lexicography, poetry, and prose, the contributors argue that his work reflects an active, imaginative response to the instability of the eighteenth-century world.
What You Will Find
Experts view this collection as a significant intervention in Johnsonian studies, providing a necessary corrective to long-standing critical assumptions. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a rigorous resource for scholars of eighteenth-century literature.
Page Count:
240
Publication Date:
2013-01-20
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199654344
ISBN-13:
9780199654345
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