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1 - ‘Severe contentions of friendship’: Barbauld, conversation, and dispute

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 December 2009

Jon Mee
Affiliation:
Margaret Candfield Fellow in English, University College, Oxford
Heather Glen
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Paul Hamilton
Affiliation:
Queen Mary University of London
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Summary

My title is taken from the following passage in William Blake's epic poem Milton:

Is this our Femin[in]e Portion the Six-fold Miltonic Female

Terribly this Portion trembles before thee O awful Man

Altho' our Human Power can sustain the severe contentions

Of Friendship, our Sexual cannot: but flies into the Ulro.

Hence arose all our terrors in Eternity! & now remembrance

Returns upon us! Are we Contraries O Milton, Thou & I

O Immortal!

This essay is not concerned with Blake directly, but aims to unpick some of the hidden relations behind the hegemonic eighteenth-century idea of the conversation of culture. ‘Conversation’ is a ubiquitous term in eighteenth-century historiography, but there seems to have been little work done on what constituted conversation as what we might term a literary and verbal technology, or how it stood in relation to ideas of controversy and freedom of speech. In Habermas's account, for instance, conversation is the means by which private opinions come to be transformed into the public sphere, but neither he nor his many followers have looked in much detail at what constituted conversation (as opposed to other kinds of discourse) in and for the period. What were the contentious others, I want to ask, against which conversation was defined? Is conversation defined as part of a continuum with contention, dispute, and controversy, or is it seen as part of a binary opposition with such terms?

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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