EMC Themes Events Slideshows Gallery Bookshelf Login EEBO ECCO  Ballad Project English Department
Faculty Grads Undergrads Courses About Us Hours Schedule Links
 
Bookshelf Review: Reconcilable Differences in Eighteenth –Century English Literature
 

Book Reviews

Piper, William Bowman. Reconcilable Differences in Eighteenth –Century English Literature. University of Delaware Press .
  William Bowman Piper demonstrates the ramifications over a wide range of literary writings of a skeptical philosophical tradition he dubs “perceptualism.” At the center of that tradition is the question, enunciated most powerfully in the writings of George Berkeley and David Hume: what if nature, and the people who inhabit nature, don’t have an independent existence, but are strictly perceptual? Piper demonstrates the pertinence of this question and worry across a very broad arc of genre-writers couplings of the eighteenth century: “Swift’s satires,” “Gay’s jests,” “Pope’s essays,” “Radcliffe’s mysteries” and “Austen’s acknowledgments.” While the readings of these texts are learned, incisive and quite suggestive, the tradition of skeptical philosophy that frames these readings is reduced, in the short introduction, to a discussion of four terms: “things,” “resemblance,” “causation,” and “perceptions.” In this readable version of Philosophy 101, the philosophical texts of Berkeley and Hume are denied the dense and complex textuality later conferred, in the chapters that follow, upon the literary texts they influence.
   - William Warner (7/12/2000)
  Edit
Return to Reviews
 
  The Early Modern Center
University of California at Santa Barbara, Department of English, South Hall 2510
Director: Ken Hiltner ~ Graduate Fellow: Cat Zusky
Design Team (Logout)
Edit your Personal Profile
to top