<p>'Poetry and the Idea of Progress 1760-1790' explores the role of poetry in eighteenth-century thinking on human progress. Its central contention is that the textural verbal characteristics of poetry were a crucial form of response to ideas of human development. That is the aesthetics of verse - how poetry appeals to the senses as well as to the intellect - constitute inadequately appreciated forms of response to the ideas of progress which were developing and gaining popular traction in Britain in the period 1760-1790.</p>
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