1st Edition

Changing Sentiments and the Magdalen Hospital Luxury, Virtue and the Senses in Eighteenth-Century Culture

By Mary Peace Copyright 2017
    218 Pages
    by Routledge

    218 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book charts the complex ideological territory of eighteenth-century sentimental discourse through the uniquely revealing lens of the London Magdalen Hospital for Penitent Prostitutes. The establishment of the London Magdalen House in 1758 is read as the cultural high watermark of sentimental confidence in the compatibility of virtue and commerce. It is the product of a whiggish, moral-sense discourse at its most ebullient and culturally authoritative. Equally visible, though, in this context, are the ideological limitations of moral-sense thinking and an anticipation of the ways in which its ideas ultimately failed to underwrite commercial virtue. Sentimental discourse fractures in the course of the mid-century: in part it becomes increasingly divorced from the world; retreating into a primitivist, proto-Romantic virtue which claims no purchase on "things as they are." Where sentimental vocabulary persists in a worldly context, it becomes divorced from a vocabulary of moral virtue. It is overlaid with a French usage where "sentiment" and "sensibility" describe exquisite emotion rather than refined and cultivated virtue.' Changing Sentiments and the Magdalen Hospital registers the fracturing and shifting ground of sentimental discourse in the changing institutional practise of the Magdalen institution, most particularly in its increasingly embrace of evangelical religion.

    1. The Radical Heart of Sentimentality: An Intervention into the Existing Critical Debate  2. Sentiment and Classical Republicanism  3. Richardson and the Problem of Sentimental Exceptionality 4. Sentiment and Taste  5. Sentiment and Religion: The Magdalen Hospital  6. 1770s and 1780s: Smith, Sentiment and Libertinism  7. The 1790s

    Biography

    Mary Peace is Senior Lecturer at Sheffield Hallam University. She has published widely on sentimental discourse, sexuality, economics and religion in eighteenth-century culture.