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The Country Wife - Critical history |  | The Country Wife - Critical history: Encyclopedia II - The Country Wife - Critical history |  | From its creation until the mid-20th century, The Country Wife was subject to both aesthetic praise and moral outrage. Many critics through the centuries have acknowledged its linguistic energy and wit, including even Victorians such as Leigh Hunt, who praised its literary quality in a selection of Restoration plays that he published in 1840 (itself a daring undertaking, for reputedly "obscene" plays that had been long out of print). However, in an influential review of Hunt's edition, Thomas Babington Macaulay swept aside questions o ...
See also:The Country Wife, The Country Wife - Background, The Country Wife - Plots, The Country Wife - Key scenes, The Country Wife - First performance, The Country Wife - Stage history, The Country Wife - Critical history, The Country Wife - Modern criticism, The Country Wife - Notes |  | | The Country Wife, The Country Wife - Background, The Country Wife - Critical history, The Country Wife - First performance, The Country Wife - Key scenes, The Country Wife - Modern criticism, The Country Wife - Notes, The Country Wife - Plots, The Country Wife - Stage history |  | |
|  |  | The Country Wife: Encyclopedia II - The Country Wife - Critical history
The Country Wife - Critical history
From its creation until the mid-20th century, The Country Wife was subject to both aesthetic praise and moral outrage. Many critics through the centuries have acknowledged its linguistic energy and wit, including even Victorians such as Leigh Hunt, who praised its literary quality in a selection of Restoration plays that he published in 1840 (itself a daring undertaking, for reputedly "obscene" plays that had been long out of print). However, in an influential review of Hunt's edition, Thomas Babington Macaulay swept aside questions of literary merit, claiming with indignation that "Wycherley's indecency is protected against the critics as a skunk is protected against the hunters. It is safe, because it is too filthy to handle and too noisome even to approach." Margery Pinchwife, regarded in Wycherley's own time as a purely comic character, was denounced by Macaulay as a scarlet woman who threw herself into "a licentious intrigue of the lowest and least sentimental kind".
It was Macaulay, not Hunt, who set the keynote for the 19th century. The play was impossible equally to stage and to discuss, forgotten and obscure. The puritanical George Bernard Shaw dismissed Restoration comedy wholesale as simply vile. The hugely knowledgeable drama critic Max Beerbohm tells a self-deprecating story of how he embarrassed himself on a visit to Swinburne by confusing an extremely rare Elizabethan play, The Country Wench, which Swinburne was eager to show him, with "a play called The Country Wife by—wasn't it Wycherley? I had once read it—or read something about it...."
Academic critics of the first half of the 20th century continued to approach The Country Wife gingerly, with frequent warnings about its "heartlessness", even as they praised its keen social observation. At this time nobody found it funny, and positive criticism tried to rescue it as satire and social criticism rather than as comedy. Macaulay's "licentious" Mrs. Pinchwife becomes in the 20th century a focus for moral concern: to critics such as Bonamy Dobrée, she is a tragic character, destined to have her naiveté cruelly taken advantage of by the "grim, nightmare figure" of Horner.[16]
Other related archives1661, 1662, 1666, 1670s, 1671, 1675, 1676, 1740s, 1753, 1766, 1794, 17th-century, 18th-century, 1924, 1931, 1959, 1965, 1969, 1975, 19th-century, 2004, 20th century, Aphra Behn, Charles Hart, Charles II, Charles Sackville, Earl of Dorset, Christopher Wren, Commonwealth, Conquest of Granada, Court, David Garrick, Edward Kynaston, Elizabeth Boutell, Elizabeth Knepp, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Falstaff, France, George Bernard Shaw, George Etherege, Great Fire of London, Iago, John Dryden, John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester, Joseph Haines, Leigh Hunt, London, Max Beerbohm, Michael Mohun, Molière, Nell Gwyn, New York, Oliver Cromwell, Pepys, Puritan, Restoration, Restoration comedy, Restoration rake, Roman, Samuel Pepys, Shampoo, Stage Beauty, Swinburne, Terence, Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, Thomas Babington Macaulay, Thomas Betterton, Volpone, William Cartwright, William Wycherley, academic, amateur, androgynous, apron stage, aristocratic, breeches roles, colloquial, courtiers, cross-dressing, cuckolded, cuckolding, dialogue, double entendre, farce, foppish, homosocial, impotence, middle class, middle-class, misogynistically, mistresses, neoclassical, paradox, patronized, plot, poetical justice, professional, prose, rake, repartee, repertory, royalists, satire, sex, trickster, unities of time, place, and action, upper-class, verse, voyeuristic, wealth
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Critical history", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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