John Wilkes: The Lives of a LibertineJohn Wilkes remains one of the most colourful and intriguing characters of eighteenth-century Britain. Born in 1725, the son of a prosperous London distiller, he was given the classical education of a gentleman, before entering politics as a Whig. Finding his party in opposition following the accession of George III in 1760 he took up his pen with sensational effect, and made a career out of excoriating the new administration and promoting the Whig interest. His charismatic style and vicious wit soon ensured that he became a figurehead for the radical cause, earning him many admirers and many enemies. Amongst the latter were the king, and the artist William Hogarth who famously depicted Wilkes as a grinning, squint-eyed, pug-nosed agent of misrule. Whilst Wilkes's political career has been much explored, particularly the period between 1763 and 1774, much less has been written about his remarkable private life. This biography provides a more comprehensive examination of Wilkes throughout his long life than has hitherto been available. Taking a thematic, rather than chronological approach it is divided into six main chapters covering family, ambition, sex, religion, class and money, which allows a much more rounded picture of Wilkes to emerge. In so doing it provides a fascinating insight, not only into one of the most intriguing characters of the Georgian period, but also into wider eighteenth-century British society and its shifting attitudes to morality, politics and gender. |
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Wilkes ' s enemies strove hard to associate him with the rampant misogyny and
outrageous blasphemy of these Restoration rakes . Wilkes and his allies , though
, had recourse to the more benign types of libertinism that had evolved by the ...
Wilkes ' s enemies strove hard to associate him with the rampant misogyny and
outrageous blasphemy of these Restoration rakes . Wilkes and his allies , though
, had recourse to the more benign types of libertinism that had evolved by the ...
Seite 91
34 The comment was disingenuous ; Potter was a practised rake well before
Wilkes came on the scene , with a wide ... of continuing attempts to represent
Wilkes as the artless dupe of older , more experienced , rakes ; but , stripped of
the ...
34 The comment was disingenuous ; Potter was a practised rake well before
Wilkes came on the scene , with a wide ... of continuing attempts to represent
Wilkes as the artless dupe of older , more experienced , rakes ; but , stripped of
the ...
Seite 116
As a rake - hero , he excited the enduring tension between people ' s conflicting
psychological desires for the security of order and the joys of mayhem . 123 With
his mercurial capacity for having it both ways , he embodied the dichotomy ...
As a rake - hero , he excited the enduring tension between people ' s conflicting
psychological desires for the security of order and the joys of mayhem . 123 With
his mercurial capacity for having it both ways , he embodied the dichotomy ...
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