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Hey Presto!
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Hey Presto! : Swift and the Quacks

Book Details

Format Hardback or Cased Book
ISBN-10 161149012X
ISBN-13 9781611490121
Publisher University of Delaware Press
Imprint University of Delaware Press
Country of Manufacture US
Country of Publication GB
Publication Date Jun 27th, 2011
Print length 412 Pages
Weight 803 grams
Dimensions 24.10 x 16.30 x 3.00 cms
Ksh 15,300.00
Re-Printing 0 in stock

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In Hey Presto! Swift and the Quacks, Hugh Ormsby-Lennon reveals how medicine shows, both ancient and modern, galvanized Jonathan Swift''s imagination and inspired his wittiest satiric voices. Swift dubbed these multifaceted traveling entertainments his Stage-itinerant or "Mountebank''s Stage." In the course of arguing that the stage-itinerant formed an irresistible model for A Tale of a Tub, Ormsby-Lennon also surmises that the mountebank''s stage will disclose that missing link, long sought, that connects the dual objects of Swift''s ire: gross corruptions in both Religion and Learning.
Traveling "medicine shows," both ancient and modern, galvanized Jonathan Swift''s imagination. Dubbing such multifaceted vagabond entertainments his "Stage-Itinerant" or "Mountebank''s Stage," Swift mimicked their argot, puffery, and slapstick in A Tale of a Tub (1704). Hugh Ormsby-Lennon reveals how the stage-itinerant not only furnished the Tale with its irresistible model but still parades that missing link, long sought, which conjoins the dual objects of Swift''s ire: "gross Corruptions in [both] Religion and Learning."From the early modern stage-itinerant, the quack doctor delivered a loquacious harangue, stuffed with magico-mysticism and pseudo-science, with high-astounding promises and boastful narcissism. To help him peddle his nostrums, elixirs, and panaceas, he enlisted a tatterdemalion troupe: funambulists, puppeteers, snake-handlers, toad-eaters, sword-swallowers, spoon-benders, prestidigitators, a Merry Andrew. From their stages, charlatans reviled each other and hawked their own books, almanacs, and other ephemera, providing Grub Street with its hottest titles. Hacks practiced, quite literally, as quacks. Mountebank and Merry Andrew swapped costumes, whiskers, patter, foreign accents. Swift apes them all in the Tale.Swift mobilizes the stage-itinerant in order to crush "gross Corruptions [in] Learning. " Documenting how early modern scholars vilified one another as mountebanks-by peppering their learned culture with invective filched from market-place harangues-Dr. Ormsby-Lennon revisits both Hans Sloane''s dark archive of quacks'' broadsides and J. B. Mencken''s international best-seller, De charlataneria eruditorum . . .de circumforanea literatorum vanitate (1715). To such Bakhtinian cant, Swift had early attuned his ear when attending the Tripos entertainments at Trinity College, Dublin, wherein fellow-students guyed dons as snake-oil salesmen. Eventually, Swift preached from an oaken pulpit of his own decanal design, manhandled around St. Patrick''s Cath

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