Reviews
Swift, the Book, and the Irish Financial Revolution offers a fresh and engaging reading... Moore's study is thought-provoking and makes a number of important interventions in both the literary scholarship on the financial revolution and in Swift scholarship more generally.
This stimulating study... will appeal to a range of audiences. Moore's study forms an important addition to a growing body of work that explores the relationships between states and their creditors.
In Mr. Moore's valuable contribution, his 'economic criticism' allows an intense reading of Swift's satires that was not unknown to former critics, but which has never been spelled out so consistently... Thanks to systematic application of economic criticism, Mr. Moore's book deserves praise. No Swift library of major importance should be without it.
Book Details
Acknowledgments
Note to the Reader
Introduction: Ireland, the Fiscal-Military State, and the Colonial Print Media
1. "God knows how we wretches came by that fashionable thing a national debt": The Dublin
Acknowledgments
Note to the Reader
Introduction: Ireland, the Fiscal-Military State, and the Colonial Print Media
1. "God knows how we wretches came by that fashionable thing a national debt": The Dublin Book Trade and the Irish Financial Revolution
2. Banking on Print: The Bank of Ireland, the South Sea Bubble, and the Bailout
3. Arachne's Bowels: Scatology, Enlightenment, and Swift's Relations with the London Book Trade
4. "Money, the Great Divider of the World, has, by a strange Revolution, been the great Uniter of a Most divided People": From Minting to Printing in The Drapier's Letters
5. Devouring Posterity: A Modest Proposal, Empire, and Ireland's "Debt of the Nation"
6. "A Mart of Literature": The 1730s and the Rise of a Literary Public Sphere in Ireland
Epilogue: A Brand Identity Crisis in a National Literature?
Notes
Bibliography
Index