Book contents
- The Cambridge History of the British Essay
- The Cambridge History of the British Essay
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Preface to a History in the Manner of an Essay
- Part I Forming the British Essay
- 1 Ancient Influences on the Essay
- 2 Surprised into Form: The Beginnings of the English Essay
- 3 Miscellanies, Commonplace Books, and the Essay
- 4 Incoherence Brought to Order: Empiricism and the Essay
- 5 The Sermon and the Essay
- 6 Anger, Rhetoric, and Early Women Essayists
- 7 The Polemical Essay in Pamphlets, Newsbooks, and Periodicals
- 8 Between Public and Private: Letters, Diaries, Essays
- 9 The Art of Criticism: Essay as Citation
- Part II The Great Age of the British Essay
- Part III Assaying Culture, Education, Reform
- Part IV Fractured Selves, Fragmented Worlds
- Part V The Essay and the Essayistic Today
- Book part
- Bibliography
- Index
3 - Miscellanies, Commonplace Books, and the Essay
from Part I - Forming the British Essay
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 October 2024
- The Cambridge History of the British Essay
- The Cambridge History of the British Essay
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Preface to a History in the Manner of an Essay
- Part I Forming the British Essay
- 1 Ancient Influences on the Essay
- 2 Surprised into Form: The Beginnings of the English Essay
- 3 Miscellanies, Commonplace Books, and the Essay
- 4 Incoherence Brought to Order: Empiricism and the Essay
- 5 The Sermon and the Essay
- 6 Anger, Rhetoric, and Early Women Essayists
- 7 The Polemical Essay in Pamphlets, Newsbooks, and Periodicals
- 8 Between Public and Private: Letters, Diaries, Essays
- 9 The Art of Criticism: Essay as Citation
- Part II The Great Age of the British Essay
- Part III Assaying Culture, Education, Reform
- Part IV Fractured Selves, Fragmented Worlds
- Part V The Essay and the Essayistic Today
- Book part
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
While the connections between commonplace books, miscellanies, and essays have long been recognised, and the significance of the commonplace methodology for early essayists noted, we still lack a comprehensive account of the genres’ enmeshing. Drawing on the work of prominent early essayists (Michel de Montaigne, John Florio, William Cornwallis), as well as the collections of Joshua Baildon and Francis Osborne, this chapter fills that gap. It shows how the commonplace method helped to generate the early essay by providing essayists with their raw materials, and also demonstrates how commonplace books and miscellanies modelled the practices of notation, citation, and imitation that made the form possible. Early essays were made from citations, but they also transformed those citations. Thus, early essays were grounded in both the humanist imitative tradition, from which the culture of commonplacing emerged, and a longer tradition of miscellaneous writing, reaching back to late antiquity.
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- The Cambridge History of the British Essay , pp. 32 - 47Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024