From Library Journal
Shields (English, The Citadel) explores compellingly the role of private societies?salons, clubs, coffeehouses, tavern companies, tea tables, balls, and ritual assemblies?in invoking free discourse and civility in British America. Such societies lay outside state control, unlike formal court society, and thus were avenues for encouraging art, forming a range of opinions, and refining manners. Each of these societies developed its own distinctive manner of discourse, which Shields describes in some detail. Scholars of British America and early American literature will find his book the most valuable, as will any reader interested in the 18th century's "Republic of Letters."?David B. Mattern, Univ. of Virginia, Charlottesville
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Review
[R]ecreates an exuberant social exchange that provides a significant contribution for scholars, students, and general readers of British-American history.
Womens Studies
[An] intelligent, deeply researched and beautifully written book.
American Studies
[O]f value to historians of eighteenth-century British polite society, as well as to American historians.
English Historical Review
Fresh and illuminating.
American Historical Review
A major contribution to our understanding of [the] process of cultural transplantation.
Jack P. Greene, Times Literary Supplement
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