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Enregistrement W4393953404 · doi:10.1353/ecs.2024.a923785

Sacred Engagements: Interfaith Marriage, Religious Toleration, and the British Novel, 1750–1820 by Alison Conway (review)

2024· article· en· W4393953404 sur OpenAlex

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Notice bibliographique

RevueEighteenth-Century Studies · 2024
Typearticle
Langueen
DomaineSocial Sciences
ThématiqueAmerican Constitutional Law and Politics
Établissements canadiensnon disponible
Organismes subventionnairesnon disponible
Mots-clésTolerationReligious studiesSociologyLawPhilosophyPolitical sciencePolitics

Résumé

récupéré en direct d'OpenAlex

Reviewed by: Sacred Engagements: Interfaith Marriage, Religious Toleration, and the British Novel, 1750–1820 by Alison Conway Jayne Lewis Alison Conway, Sacred Engagements: Interfaith Marriage, Religious Toleration, and the British Novel, 1750–1820 (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Univ. Press, 2023). Pp. 221; 7 b/w illus. $34.95 paper, $94.95 cloth. The long arm of the secularization thesis notwithstanding, Protestant religious ideology has long been visible as a crucible of the eighteenth-century British novel, even as the marriage plot emerged as its signature telos. Nonetheless, our current "postsecular" moment has brought overdue attention to the many faiths active alongside the Anglican and dissenting Protestant groups that dominated Britain's confessional landscape, guided its politics, and shaped its literary practices. Alison Conway's Sacred Engagements: Interfaith Marriage, Religious Toleration, and the British Novel, 1750–1820 explores the implications of interfaith romance—thus of believers, as the Apostle Paul fretted, potentially "unequally yoked with unbelievers"—for a marriage-minded genre's evolving ethical, political, and aesthetic identity. Conway shares Lisa O'Connell's recently developed position that the marriage plot complemented the "one flesh" imperative handed down from Eden to the Anglican sacraments that the 1753 Hardwicke Marriage Act politicized when it rendered them the law of the land. But while O'Connell's exploration of dissent from that imperative sticks with Protestant flesh, Conway introduces Spanish and Italian Jews; Italian, French, and Canadian Catholics; and the odd freethinker into the mix. The results are themselves mixed in the very best sense: complex, unpredictable, and generative. Conway separates considerations of Richardson's Sir Charles Grandison (1753–4) from Austen's Mansfield Park (1814) with meticulous examinations of Frances Brooke's "Canadian novel," The History of Emily Montague (1769), Maria Edgeworth's "Jewish" one, Harrington (1817), and the Catholic Elizabeth Inchbald's A Simple Story (1791). Each narrative raises, only to dash, the possibility of interfaith marriage. Conway stays open to the unseemly feelings, from disgust to open-ended desire, that close encounter with religious otherness entailed for [End Page 385] many Protestant English readers. In a context of colonial expansion, these include "unsettling" sensations provoked by new "differences within the nation—the moment when the familiar becomes unheimlich, when the advent of religious pluralism threatened to place a stranger in the marriage bed" (5). Though we might reasonably expect to end up in Gothic romance, Conway picks a different and more subtle poison, sticking to sentimental and domestic realist subgenres and honoring the commitment to moral pedagogy scripted into them. As Conway acknowledges, non-Protestant groups composed barely 2% of Britain's general population, with intermarriage rare. Confronting this reality, Conway's writers route the romance unrealized in their pages through other, more visible racial, national, ethnic, and political alliances. Yet Conway enlists the resulting complexities into a fresh and relevant dialogue with the novel's ever-shifting form. Besides: "all marriages . . . have the potential to take on a 'mixed' quality as they unfold" (2). No person who's ever been married can doubt it. This "'mixed' quality" brings sociopolitical history into fiction and the political discourse mobilized by Locke's 1689 Letter concerning Toleration into the household. Open-ended "conversation[s] about interfaith marriage" (2), mobilized by brutally "abbreviated" plots (39), challenge the Protestant complacency of a Lockean model that ties toleration to "an ethics of sociability" upholding the superficial religious pluralism legalized in the Williamite Toleration Act of 1689. Even as the ideal of unity sometimes feeds nascent discourses on racial purity, Conway's "'counterfactual' toleration history" identifies "the gendered division of affective labor that shapes political philosophy." Traditionally, women's often uniquely "strong religious feelings" domesticate political order by mobilizing "family uniformity" (7). But women who marry outside their own faith turn the household inside out. Made intimate, the fragmenting experience of toleration's limits invites the more immediate idiom of active pain tolerance. Adapting political phenomenologist Lars Tønder, Conway maintains that "active tolerance" "sustains more equitable relations by attending to the body's 'affective intensities'" at pain's threshold. "Until we learn to understand the pain we feel in the face of difference as productive, rather than destructive, we will experience tolerance as a burden" (10...

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Prédiction distillée sur la base complète

Imitation des enseignants

Ni prévalence calibrée, ni vérité terrain. Validation humaine à venir. Apprise à partir de 10 348 étiquettes directes de Codex et de 10 348 étiquettes directes de Gemma. Le mode candidate est l'union des têtes enseignantes seuillées; le consensus est leur intersection. Ces sorties portent le statut machine_predicted_unvalidated et ne sont ni des étiquettes humaines ni des étiquettes directes de modèles de pointe.

score de la tête « metaresearch » (Codex)0,001
score de la tête « metaresearch » (Gemma)0,000
Version: codex-gemma-dda1882f352aStatut de validation: machine_predicted_unvalidated
Catégories candidatesÉtudes des sciences et des technologies
Catégories consensuellesaucune
DomaineSignal candidat: aucune · Signal consensuel: aucune
Devis d'étudeSignal candidat: Sans objet · Signal consensuel: Sans objet
GenreSignal candidat: Synthèse · Signal consensuel: Synthèse
Score de désaccord entre enseignants0,316
Score d'incertitude au seuil1,000

Scores Codex et Gemma par catégorie

CatégorieCodexGemma
Métarecherche0,0010,000
Méta-épidémiologie (sens strict)0,0000,000
Méta-épidémiologie (sens large)0,0000,000
Bibliométrie0,0000,000
Études des sciences et des technologies0,0020,002
Communication savante0,0000,000
Science ouverte0,0000,000
Intégrité de la recherche0,0000,000
Charge utile insuffisante (le modèle a refusé de juger)0,0000,000

Scores machine (provisoires)

Les deux têtes enseignantes du modèle étudiant, lues sur ce travail. Un score ordonne la base pour la relecture; il n'affirme jamais une catégorie, et le statut de validation accompagne chaque rangée tel quel.

Scores de référence d'un modèle non mature (critères de maturité non atteints, 7 itérations). Un score ordonne; il n'affirme jamais une catégorie.

Tête enseignante Opus0,019
Tête enseignante GPT0,316
Écart entre enseignants0,297 · la distance entre les deux têtes enseignantes sur ce seul travail
Statut de validationscore_only:v0-immature-baseline · tel quel depuis la passe de notation : score_only signifie que le nombre peut ordonner les travaux, et qu'aucune étiquette de catégorie n'en découle