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Hints Toward an Essay on Conversation (c. 1713) [ Practices ]
… before; or, at best, some insipid adventure of the relater. Another general fault in conversation, is that of those who affect to talk of themselves: Some, without any ceremony, will run over the history of their lives; will relate the …
Conversation | Audience
Anthology
Drury Lane [ Sports & Leisure / Cities ]
… Immorality and Profaneness of the English Stage (1698), considered theatrical pleasure suspect precisely because of its affective power and ability to influence social formation: ‘Nothing has gone farther in Debauching the Age than the Stage … at the End, they would have torn the House down: Our seats shook under us.’ 12 Burney’s account shows how the ‘affective sensibility of the collective becomes desired in itself’ in a ‘shared sense of the power of numbers.’ 13 12 . … by encoring the anthem with ‘repeated Huzzas.’ 14 Audience participation could reshape a text’s emotional and artistic affect, breaking the entertainment into new divisions with vociferous affirmations, or loud catcalls and hisses. When, on …
Audience | Coffeehouses | Fame | Rioting | Theatre
Encyclopedia
English theatre in Enlightenment France [ Literary & Artistic genres ]
Anglomania | Audience | Emotions | Enlightenment | Friendship | Theatre | Translation
Encyclopedia
Playbills [ Print culture / Sports & Leisure ]
… February 1815 reports that Miss O’Neill’s performance of Mrs. Haller on a previous night ‘excited the strongest and most affecting interest—the audience expressed, in acclamations, their rapturous delight’. 6 4 . Christopher B. Balme, …
Advertisement | Audience | Collecting | Entertainement | Print culture | Theatre
Encyclopedia
English theatre (and transnational sociability) [ Sports & Leisure / National & Transnational cultures / Translation, Dissemination & Reception ]
… characters reflect the ambivalence of English attitudes towards France: having a French tailor or speaking French with affectation often characterises comic butts, but conversely a correct mastery of the subtleties of French fashion and …
Audience | Diplomacy | Europe | Opera | Theatre | Translation | Travel
Encyclopedia
Scientific experiments [ Politics & Society / Science ]
… ‘bears a considerable resemblance to that of the sublime, which is one of the most exquisite of all those that affect the human imagination'. 11 To survey the history of scientific progress was to experience the sense of boundless …
Audience | Coffeehouses | Conversation | Public sphere | Science
Encyclopedia