1534512
9780870239625
This study argues that during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, with the rise of a modern market economy in which the text became commodified into a material object---the book---writers fought against a perceived loss of authority by developing a theory of the rhetorical Sublime. Like the sacramental presence in the Christian church, the realm of the Sublime allowed the reader an opportunity for incorporation in a spiritual communion with an immaterial text offered by a disembodied authorial presence.The book offers both a psychobiography of De Quincey and a fresh study of the evolution of his ideas from early childhood up to the publication of his masterwork, Confessions of an English Opium-Eater.Rzepka, Charles J. is the author of 'Sacramental Commodities Gift, Text, and the Sublime in De Quincey' with ISBN 9780870239625 and ISBN 0870239627.
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