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Grub Street Invades Hogarth
ROBERT ETHERIDGE MOORE
Hogarth’s Literary Relationships, 1948, p.24
University of Minnesota Press
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Título:
Grub Street Invades Hogarth
Autor:
ROBERT ETHERIDGE MOORE
Assuntos:
Anthropology
;
Applied anthropology
;
Arts
;
Behavioral sciences
;
Biological sciences
;
Biology
;
Comic theater
;
Criminal law
;
Criminal offenses
;
Criminals
;
Cultural anthropology
;
Cultural customs
;
Death rites
;
Developmental biology
;
Developmental stages
;
Funerals
;
Funerary rituals
;
Growth and development
;
Heroism
;
Human behavior
;
Human populations
;
Idealism
;
Idleness
;
Kantianism
;
Larvae
;
Law
;
Literary genres
;
Literary modes
;
Literature
;
Metaphysics
;
Monism
;
Musical comedies
;
Ontology
;
Pantomime
;
Performing arts
;
Persons
;
Philosophy
;
Piracy
;
Pirates
;
Poetry
;
Population studies
;
Rites of passage
;
Rituals
;
Satire
;
Social sciences
;
Theater
;
Theater history
;
Theatrical genres
;
Transcendental idealism
É parte de:
Hogarth’s Literary Relationships, 1948, p.24
Descrição:
That Hogarth was easily the most eminently and immediately vendible of all English pictorial artists is shown by the tribe of authors who at once embracedA Harlot’s Progressas a great fountainhead of literary inspiration, and by the enormous public who bought their feeble works. The series was so popular that on 24 April 1732, about two weeks after the publication of the prints, there appeared a pamphlet setting forth the story in verse, which in its turn was so popular that it actually went through four editions in seventeen days.¹ Even more surprising is another pamphlet professing to
Editor:
University of Minnesota Press
Idioma:
Inglês
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