Jonathan Swift: Irish Blow-In

Jonathan Swift: Irish Blow-In

by Eugene Hammond
Jonathan Swift: Irish Blow-In

Jonathan Swift: Irish Blow-In

by Eugene Hammond

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Overview

Jonathan Swift: Irish Blow-in covers the arc of the first half of Jonathan Swift’s life, offering fresh details of the contentment and exuberance of his childhood, of the support he received from his grandmother, of his striking affection for Esther Johnson from the time she was ten years old (his pet name for her in her twenties was “saucebox”), of his precocious entry into English politics with his Contests and Dissensions pamphlet, of his brilliant and much misunderstood Tale of a Tub, and of his naive determination to do well both as a vicar of the small parish of Laracor in Ireland and as a writer for the Tory administration trying to pull England out of debt by ending the war England was engaged in with France.
I do not share with past biographers the sense that Swift had a deprived childhood. I do not share the suspicion that most of Swift’s enmities were politically motivated. I do not feel critical of him because he was often fastidious with his money. I do not think he was insincere about his religious faith. His pride, his sexual interests, his often shocking or uninhibited language, his instinct for revenge – emphasized by many previous biographers – were all fundamental elements of his being, but elements that he either used for rhetorical effect, or that he tried to keep in check, and that he felt that religion helped him to keep in check. Swift had as firm a conviction as did Freud that we are born with wayward tendencies; unlike Freud, though, he saw both religion and civil society as necessary and helpful checks on those wayward tendencies, and he (frequently, but certainly not always) acknowledged that he shared those tendencies with the rest of us.
This biography, in two books, Jonathan Swift: Irish Blow-in and Jonathan Swift: Our Dean, will differ from most literary biographies in that it does not aim to show how Swift’s life illuminates his writings, but rather how and why Swift wrote in order to live the life he wanted to live. I have liberally quoted Swift’s own words in this biography because his inventive expression of ideas, both in his public works and in his private letters, was what has made him a unique and compelling figure in the history of literature. I hope in these two books to come closer than past biographies to capturing how it felt to Swift himself to live his life.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781611496062
Publisher: University of Delaware Press
Publication date: 03/22/2016
Pages: 822
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.00(h) x 2.10(d)

About the Author

Eugene Hammond is director of the writing program at Stony Brook University.

Table of Contents

Preface
The Author to the Reader
Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
Part One: 1667-1689: Blown in to Ireland
Part Two: 1689-1699: Prolonged Adolescence
Part Three: 1699-1704: Willows, Account Books, Taking Responsibility for Two Women Formerly in Service
Part Four: 1704-1710: Gaining Traction in the English Worlds of Politics and of Literature
Part Five: 1710-1711: Political and Personal Exhilaration
Part Six: 1711-1713: Swift’s Pen (at Considerable Cost to Swift) Trumps Marlborough’s Sword
Part Seven: 1713-1714: Once More into the Breach
Bibliography, Manuscript Sources
Bibliography, Printed Sources
Index
About the Author

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