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Jonathan Swift

The Reluctant Rebel

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Jonathan Swift's world-famous books?from Gulliver's Travels to A Modest Proposal?are unparalleled in their piercing critique of modern society. Half-orphaned, a Dubliner by birth, but a man who would always insist he was English, Jonathan Swift (1667-1745) was a figure of great contradictions. An essayist, political pamphleteer, poet, and cleric who became dean of St. Patrick's Cathedral in Dublin, Swift satirized the powerful but aspired to political greatness, mocked men's vanity but held himself in high esteem, and was a religious moralizer famed for his malice?a man sharply aware of humanity's flaws, but no less susceptible to them. At once a revealing biography of a life that encompasses writing on religion, class, sex, power, and poverty and a portrait of the foremost political writer of his day, Jonathan Swift draws a vivid and nuanced account of an extraordinary man and a turbulent period of history.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Derek Perkins narrates this biography of the author of GULLIVER'S TRAVELS with a distinguished air befitting a historical figure who genuinely wanted improve the culture he was living in. Listeners will enjoy the excitement and intrigue of Swift's world while also appreciating Perkins's matter-of-fact delivery. One is transported back to the early eighteenth century to discover that the problems and cultural issues of the time were not dissimilar to those we deal with today. Perkins is on par with his more famous literary subject as he describes with seeming ease and enjoyment a most interesting period in English life and literature. T.D. © AudioFile 2018, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 3, 2016
      In this engaging, though at times excessively detailed, biography, Stubbs (Donne: The Reformed Soul) succeeds in portraying famed author Jonathan Swift (1667–1745) with all his contradictions. Swift, best known for Gulliver’s Travels, was an irreverent social critic and a moralist, the dean of St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Dublin, and “a socialite in the parlor.” Born in Dublin to displaced English parents, he would always insist he was English and, as Stubbs notes, saw no contradiction between urging the native Irish to Anglicize their language and customs and opposing English tyranny over Ireland. One of his day’s most prominent political writers, Swift supported the Anglican establishment yet felt an affinity with the poor, mentally ill, and oppressed, and his attitudes toward women could be, as Stubbs shows, both enlightened and repressive. Stubbs covers the English Civil War, which displaced Swift’s parents; the Glorious Revolution, which led Swift to move to England; and the ascension of George I, which sent him back to Ireland. He also touches on the animosity between Catholics and Protestants, the printing and bookselling industry, Swift’s literary peers, and much more. Stubbs’s descriptions are vivid, and his literary analyses exacting and thought-provoking, but one wishes he had been more selective in contextual detail. Nevertheless, Stubbs excels at showing how Swift became “the most notorious writer of his day.” Agent: Toby Eady, Toby Eady Associates (U.K.).

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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