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The Sublime

Precursors and British Eighteenth-Century Conceptions

by Karl Axelsson (Author)
©2007 Monographs 236 Pages

Summary

The appeal of the sublime in the minds of British critics and poets during the eighteenth century holds a unique position in the history of aesthetics. At no other time has aesthetics displayed a similar interest in the experience of the sublime. This book explores the impulses behind the fascination for that experience. The Greek treatise Peri Hupsous by Longinus constitutes the earliest source for the experience of the sublime, and as such it shaped much of British eighteenth-century criticism. But the attraction of the sublime received stimulus from other sources as well. In the effort to expand the context of the sublime, the author considers the incentives provided not only by Longinus, but also by the criticism of intellectual literature during the second half of the seventeenth century; a body of criticism that was not primarily concerned with the sublime, but which nevertheless served as an important link to its subsequent appeal.

Details

Pages
236
Year
2007
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039111077
Language
English
Keywords
Longinus De sublimitate Sublime Longinian Treatise Imagination History /Interpretation Intimation of Sublime
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2007. 236 pp.

Biographical notes

Karl Axelsson (Author)

The Author: Karl Axelsson, born 1976, holds an M.A. in Aesthetics from Uppsala University. Axelsson is a researcher in Aesthetics at the Department of Philosophy. This book is his doctoral thesis.

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Title: The Sublime