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The Sentimental Virtuoso: Collecting Feeling in Henry Mackenzie's The Man of Feeling.

Authors :
Benedict, Barbara M.
Source :
Eighteenth Century Fiction. Spring2016, Vol. 28 Issue 3, p473-499. 27p.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

This article explains the ambiguities in Henry Mackenzie's quasiironic sentimental novel, The Man of Feeling, by examining its debt to an earlier, formative literary tradition: the seventeenth-century character collection that features the caricatured antiquarian virtuoso. Character collections, exemplified by Samuel Butler's Characters (mainly written between 1667 and 1669), constitute catalogues of ridiculed social and psychological types, prominent among whom are collector-characters derogated for antisocial self-absorption, arrogance, scopophilia, impotence, and credulity. As a sentimental novel, written in an era that highly valued sociability, The Man of Feeling reveals how this satiric inheritance complicates the praise of feeling. It reworks the structure and types of the character tradition and the figure of the antiquarian virtuoso by means of narrative frames that distance readers from the sentimental incidents; an episodic form that fractures sequential narrative; and rhetoric, themes, and characters that play on the opposition between materiality, idea, and feeling that informs the caricature of the antiquarian virtuoso. These features help to explain the ambiguity of the "man of feeling": the sentimental virtuoso who both objectifies and personalizes a world of collectible experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08406286
Volume :
28
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Eighteenth Century Fiction
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
115067127
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3138/ecf.28.3.473