期刊论文详细信息
Humanities
The Early Literary Evolution of the Notorious Pirate Henry Avery
Richard Frohock1 
[1] English Department, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK 74078, USA;
关键词: pirates;    avery;    atlantic world;    eighteenth-century literature;    state of nature;    thomas hobbes;   
DOI  :  10.3390/h9010006
来源: DOAJ
【 摘 要 】

Henry Avery (alternately spelled Every) was one of the most notorious pirates of the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, and scholars have written much about Avery in an effort to establish the historical details of his mutiny and acts of piracy. Other scholars have focused on the substantial literary production that his life occasioned; the early literary history of Avery’s exploits evolves quickly away from the known facts of his life, offering instead a literary trajectory of accumulated tropes about Avery’s motivations, actions, and transformations. This literary invention of Avery is a compelling subject in itself, particularly as writers used his story to explore pressing philosophical and political concerns of the period. In this essay, I consider how early fictions about Avery look well beyond the history of a particular pirate to ruminate on topical ideas about the state of nature, the origins of civil society, and human tendencies toward self-interest and corruption that seem—inevitably—to accompany power and threaten civil order, however newly formed or ostensibly principled.

【 授权许可】

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