Charles and Mary Lamb, Tales from Shakespear (1810)

Charles and Mary Lamb, Tales from Shakespear (1810), with its facing frontispiece engraved from William Mulready's designs by William Blake. This book has not been out of print since its first appearance. The second edition was published by Mary Jane Godwin, the wife of Lamb's close friend the philosopher and novelist William Godwin.

Author(s):  
Susan Manly

The child is often imagined in the work of Coleridge and Wordsworth as a source of creative energies and of hope for the future of humanity, as well as symbolizing a return to original naturalness. But these ideas about childhood were not peculiar to the Lake poets: they have their origin in the politicized educational theories of John Locke and Jean-Jacques Rousseau, as well as in Joseph Priestley’s revolutionary rhetoric and the children’s literature that emerged from this tradition. Variously combining these influences, a new, often realist children’s literature written by Anna Barbauld, John Aikin, Mary Wollstonecraft, William Blake, Maria Edgeworth, and William Godwin sought to revolutionize the forms and content of earlier books for children. The new children’s literature of the 1790s and early 1800s envisaged a rising generation of socially engaged thinkers capable of transforming society.


2019 ◽  
Vol 26 ◽  
pp. 27-40
Author(s):  
María Teresa González Mínguez

According to Cartesian principles, in the seventeenth century the body was thought to be subordinated to the mind. Later in the eighteenth-century male authors of medical treatises supported the idea that the interaction of body and mind produced passion and could dangerously turn into mental breakdown. In all her novels Jane Austen showed an enormous interest in all matters concerning medical treatment. In Sense and Sensibility(1811), Austen emphasized illness and suffering by mixing physical health and mental disease with moral and philosophical doctrines. My contention in this article is that moralists, philosophers and thinkers such as Dr Johnson, William Blake, William Godwin, and Adam Smith collaborated with Austen to shape the idea that sensibility was no disease and sense no virtue; instead they propose that human beings, especially women, can obtain individual and collective profit and promote changes not only in the past but also in the present if they regulate their reason and feeling with a practical mindset. Key words: physical health, mental breakdown, medicine, moral thoughts, regulation of feelings.      


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emily Rutter ◽  
Caroline Ashley Wilmuth ◽  
Amy Cuddy
Keyword(s):  

1992 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen C. Behrendt
Keyword(s):  

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