Scriblerus Club
[ Clubs & Societies / Associational culture ]
… of aspects of society and culture that were worthy of criticism and satire. Its real existence as an actual practice – authors meeting with the self-conception that they were doing so as part of a club – lasted only for less than a year, … discretion. John Arbuthnot was famously as prolific with providing such hints as he was unconcerned with getting authorial credit for them. This makes his role in the Scriblerian project one of the most fascinating particularly … by turns, conversing interchangeably, and walking down hand in hand to posterity; not in the stiff forms of learned Authors, flattering each other, and setting the rest of mankind at nought: but in a free, unimportant, natural, easy …
Academies | Friendship | Satire
Encyclopedia
Republic of Letters
[ National & Transnational cultures / Reading & Writing ]
… “The French Enlightenment Network,” The Journal of Modern History (88, n°3, 2016), pp. 495-534. Whether an acclaimed author like Voltaire or a layperson, denoting one’s membership in the Republic of Letters through correspondence, was in … (Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 2003). 14 . Elena Russo, Styles of Enlightenment: Taste, Politics, and Authorship in Eighteenth-Century France (Baltimore, 2007), p. 63. 15 . See Antoine Lilti, Le monde des salons: …
Academies | Censorship | Community | Correspondence | Cosmopolitanism | Networks | Republic of Letters
… Italian academies were not establishments formalised through the occupation of a dedicated space or endorsed by local authorities. They generally took root in the private homes of scholars or the nobility, who hosted the meetings around a …