“Mises en abyme” and satirical descriptions: “characters” of writing and writers in seventeenth-century England

This article demonstrates that the genre of seventeenth-century English “character-books” was highly self-reflexive. Authors theorized the act of writing by discussing the rules and complexities of literary composition in their prefaces and introductions. They also illustrated the process of writing...

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Main Author: Claire Labarbe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institut du Monde Anglophone 2012-04-01
Series:Etudes Epistémè
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/episteme/407
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author Claire Labarbe
author_facet Claire Labarbe
author_sort Claire Labarbe
collection DOAJ
description This article demonstrates that the genre of seventeenth-century English “character-books” was highly self-reflexive. Authors theorized the act of writing by discussing the rules and complexities of literary composition in their prefaces and introductions. They also illustrated the process of writing in the body of their texts by representing diverse “characters” of writers. These were sometimes meant as a reflexion of the authors themselves, and their works and style were then presented as instances of artistic achievement. Conversely, hack writers practising other genres than that of character-writing were satirized along with their cheap poems, trite ballads, trivial diurnals, provocative libels or blasphemous pamphlets. The extraordinary development of cheap print during the Civil War was reflected in the evolution of “character-books”. Indeed authors of characters responded to the growing competition of pamphlets by satirizing cheaper forms of literature as artistically inferior. But the success of cheap print also meant that “characters” were increasingly published as pamphlets. By lampooning writers of “base” literary forms, authors of characters thus partly satirized themselves.
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spelling doaj-art-55ca22b2dd274142bb87d06046fd74ff2025-08-20T03:47:25ZengInstitut du Monde AnglophoneEtudes Epistémè1634-04502012-04-012110.4000/episteme.407“Mises en abyme” and satirical descriptions: “characters” of writing and writers in seventeenth-century EnglandClaire LabarbeThis article demonstrates that the genre of seventeenth-century English “character-books” was highly self-reflexive. Authors theorized the act of writing by discussing the rules and complexities of literary composition in their prefaces and introductions. They also illustrated the process of writing in the body of their texts by representing diverse “characters” of writers. These were sometimes meant as a reflexion of the authors themselves, and their works and style were then presented as instances of artistic achievement. Conversely, hack writers practising other genres than that of character-writing were satirized along with their cheap poems, trite ballads, trivial diurnals, provocative libels or blasphemous pamphlets. The extraordinary development of cheap print during the Civil War was reflected in the evolution of “character-books”. Indeed authors of characters responded to the growing competition of pamphlets by satirizing cheaper forms of literature as artistically inferior. But the success of cheap print also meant that “characters” were increasingly published as pamphlets. By lampooning writers of “base” literary forms, authors of characters thus partly satirized themselves.https://journals.openedition.org/episteme/407
spellingShingle Claire Labarbe
“Mises en abyme” and satirical descriptions: “characters” of writing and writers in seventeenth-century England
Etudes Epistémè
title “Mises en abyme” and satirical descriptions: “characters” of writing and writers in seventeenth-century England
title_full “Mises en abyme” and satirical descriptions: “characters” of writing and writers in seventeenth-century England
title_fullStr “Mises en abyme” and satirical descriptions: “characters” of writing and writers in seventeenth-century England
title_full_unstemmed “Mises en abyme” and satirical descriptions: “characters” of writing and writers in seventeenth-century England
title_short “Mises en abyme” and satirical descriptions: “characters” of writing and writers in seventeenth-century England
title_sort mises en abyme and satirical descriptions characters of writing and writers in seventeenth century england
url https://journals.openedition.org/episteme/407
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