“So Unlucky a Perspective”: The Critique of Moral Sentimentalism in The Man of Feeling

B Eker - Zeitschrift für Anglistik und Amerikanistik, 2014 - degruyter.com
Zeitschrift für Anglistik und Amerikanistik, 2014degruyter.com
Abstract Henry Mackenzie's The Man of Feeling (1771) is commonly described as a typical
sentimental novel, yet the work has many aspects that a straightforward sentimentalist
interpretation cannot possibly account for. I argue in this paper that The Man of Feeling, far
from being a straightforward sentimental novel, encapsulates a profound critique of both
moral sentimentalism and the genre of sentimental fiction. This critical stance is established
in the first instance, I claim, by the ironic distance to the sentimental material in the novel …
Abstract
Henry Mackenzie’s The Man of Feeling (1771) is commonly described as a typical sentimental novel, yet the work has many aspects that a straightforward sentimentalist interpretation cannot possibly account for. I argue in this paper that The Man of Feeling, far from being a straightforward sentimental novel, encapsulates a profound critique of both moral sentimentalism and the genre of sentimental fiction. This critical stance is established in the first instance, I claim, by the ironic distance to the sentimental material in the novel, which results from the complex, multilevel narrative structure, and is further reinforced by numerous satirical elements in the text. As I demonstrate, reading Mackenzie’s work as an antithesis of the sentimental novel that parodies the sentimentalist moral epistemology underlying this mode of fiction does a much better job at explaining several crucial aspects of the novel than the sentimentalist interpretation.
De Gruyter
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