Gulliver's Travels

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Broadview Press, 27 de febr. 2012 - 454 pàgines

In this narrative of the gullible ship’s doctor Lemuel Gulliver and his extraordinary travels, Jonathan Swift takes readers through a series of apparently child-like fantasy worlds of tiny people and giants, floating islands and talking horses. But through this fantastic journey, he also gave to literature an enduring model of mankind’s follies, vulnerabilities, vanities, and self-destructiveness. Dangerously topical in its own time and much debated ever since, Gulliver’s Travels is among those works of English literature that entrap and challenge readers in every period.

This edition uses the 1735 edition as the copy text, retaining the original, unmodernized text. Historical appendices provide a context for the novel’s literary models, scientific influences, and complex political and religious allusions.

 

Continguts

List of Illustrations
9
Acknowledgements
11
Introduction
13
A Brief Chronology
43
A Note on the Text
47
Gullivers Travels
49
PreliminaryCorrespondence
355
Literary and CulturalInfluences
359
Science Politics Religion
381
Ireland
401
Contemporary Reception
423
Select Bibliography
451
Copyright

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Sobre l'autor (2012)

Allan Ingram is Professor of English at Northumbria University. He is currently Director of a major research project, “Before Depression: The Culture and Representation of the English Malady, 1660-1800” (www.beforedepression.com).

Informació bibliogràfica