johnson

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SAMUEL JOHNSON 1709- 1784 "the Age of Johnson" (Augustan Age) writer of exceptional range: a poet, a lexicographer, a translator, a journalist and essayist, a travel writer, a biographer, an editor, and a critic humble origins, much of his life spent in relative poverty born in 1709 at Lichfield in Staffordshire, son of a successful bookseller intellectual prodigy - excelled in the local grammar school (Latin and Greek) forced to leave Pembroke College, Oxford (studied religion)

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Page 1: Johnson

SAMUEL JOHNSON1709- 1784

"the Age of Johnson" (Augustan Age)

writer of exceptional range: a poet, a lexicographer, a translator, a journalist and essayist, a travel writer, a biographer, an editor, and a critic

humble origins, much of his life spent in relative poverty

born in 1709 at Lichfield in Staffordshire, son of a successful bookseller

intellectual prodigy - excelled in the local grammar school (Latin and Greek)

forced to leave Pembroke College, Oxford (studied religion)

Page 2: Johnson

miscellaneous writer - - Gentleman's Magazine - biographical essays, political reports, and brief literary noticesdecade of the 1750s - established his reputation as a major literary figure - following the pattern of Addison and Steele's famous Spectator papers, he produced the Rambler - wide range of topics in social life, literary criticism, and moral thought leading critic of the age - classical tradition derived from Aristotle and Horace - preface to The Plays of William Shakespeare (1765): "The end of writing is to instruct; the end of poetry is to instruct by pleasing" uneasiness about fictional invention - allegory in Rambler number 96: "The muses wove, in the loom of Pallas, a loose and changeable robe, like that in which Falsehood captivated her admirers; with this they invested Truth, and named her Fiction" Rambler - March 1750 - published just after the great series of fictional innovations of the 1740s--Richardson's Pamela and Clarissa, Smollett's Roderick Random, and Fielding's Joseph Andrews and Tom Jones. Johnson defines the new works of fiction by their realism - they "exhibit life in its true state" + rooted in the wish-fulfilling fantasy of the old romances (submerged basis of all fictional plots) - condemns this as a violation of "truth" old romances - so improbable that nobody could mistake them for realitynew novels - so plausible in detail that readers are in danger of overlooking their implausibility in structure

Page 3: Johnson

1755 - A Dictionary of the English Language - 40,000 definitionsprescribes standards of usage for the English language (composed the definitions himself, giving examples, synonyms, and showing the importance of context - quotations)preface - intention to assemble a dictionary ‘by which the pronunciation of our language may be fixed, and its attainment facilitated; by which its purity may be preserved, its use ascertained, and its duration lengthened’ aware: inevitability of linguistic change: sounds are too volatile and subtle for legal restraints; to enchain syllables, and to lash the wind, are equally the undertakings of pride, unwilling to measure its desire by its strengthhonorary M.A. from Oxford Monument of linguistic scholarship

Page 4: Johnson

1759, The Prince of Abissinia (Rasselas)

predicament of Prince Rasselas in the Edenic Happy Valley – trope of incarceration, imprisonment - moral and theological center of the book - metaphorical hunger of the human imagination --perpetual dissatisfaction with what it has and its desire for something beyond what it possesses originally entitled the tale “The Choice of Life”“the dangerous prevalence of imagination”

"All power of fancy over reason is a degree of insanity.... To indulge the power of fiction, and send imagination out upon the wing, is often the sport of those who delight too much in silent speculation.... In time some particular train of ideas fixes the attention; all other intellectual gratifications are rejected; the mind, in weariness or leisure, recurs constantly to the favourite conception, and feasts on the luscious falsehood whenever she is offended with the bitterness of truth.... Then fictions begin to operate as realities, false opinions fasten upon the mind, and life passes in dreams of rapture or of anguish." powerful rejection of fiction as wish fulfilment not easy to categorize - not a realistic novel, either in Richardson's sense of realism or in Fielding's - romance – escapist visions – discussion of imagination - Oriental taste - foreshadows Romantic aesthetics! philosophical fable

Page 5: Johnson

1781, The Lives of the Poets 52 contributions - comprehensive perspective on English literary culture – observations, interpretations, anecdotes and evaluative assessments – axiology – valorisation - hierarchy groundbreaking analysis of metaphysical poetry assessments of works as different as Milton's Paradise Lost and Pope's Rape of the Lock ; panoramic view of the Augustan era biographical narrative, literary analysis, and moral reflection that no other writer has ever equalled