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The Tory View of Landscape »

Book cover image of The Tory View of Landscape by Nigel Everett

Authors: Nigel Everett
ISBN-13: 9780300059045, ISBN-10: 0300059043
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Yale University Press
Date Published: July 1994
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Nigel Everett

Book Synopsis

In the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, it seemed to many that England was being transformed by various kinds of 'improvements' in agriculture and industry, in gardening and the ornamentation of landscape. Such changes were understood to reflect matters of the greatest importance in the moral, social and political arrangements of the country. In the area of landscape design, to clear a wood, or plant one, to build a folly or a cottage, to design in the formal style or the picturesque, was to express a political orientation of one kind or another. To choose to employ Capability Brown, Humphry Repton or one of their lesser-known competitors, was to make a statement regarding the history of England, its constitutional organisation and the relationships that ought to exist between its citizens. Although many landowners may have been oblivious to this, there was a large body of critical opinion, poetry, theology and social discourse that offered to inform and correct them. In this illuminating and stimulating book, Nigel Everett reviews the entire debate, from about 1760 to 1820, emphasising in particular the attempts of various writers to defend a 'traditional' or tory view of the landscape against the aggressive, privatising tendency of improvement. Challenging the narrow implications of the existing schools of landscape historians - the 'establishment' historians, concerned primarily with currents of 'taste', who ignore the wider issues involved, and the commentators on the Left who have tended to see landscape politics as the politics of class - Everett reveals the history of English landscape as a political struggle between, on the one hand, the mechanical, universal and impersonal - whig - point of view and, on the other, the natural, Christian, particular and organic point of view. Everett depicts a lively, intelligent debate regarding the development of English society, as active among cultivated clergymen and landowners as among the theoreticians.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Introduction1
1The Perception of Improvement10
2The Whig Idea of Landscape and its Critics38
3The Mansion and the Landscape91
4'Benevolent Ornaments'123
5'A Noble Estate'151
6The View of Donwell Abbey183
7'A Sort of National Property'204
8The Nature of Toryism209
Notes and References223
Bibliography233
Index246

Subjects