Book contents
- The New Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson
- The New Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Short Titles and Note on the Text and Cover Art
- Introduction: Contemporary Johnson
- Chapter 1 Johnson, Ethics, and Living
- Chapter 2 Johnson and the Essay
- Chapter 3 Johnson and Renaissance Humanism
- Chapter 4 Johnson and Language
- Chapter 5 Johnson and British Historiography
- Chapter 6 Johnson and Fiction
- Chapter 7 Johnson and Gender
- Chapter 8 Johnson, Race, and Slavery
- Chapter 9 Johnson’s Politics
- Chapter 10 Johnson’s Poetry
- Chapter 11 Johnson’s Editions of Shakespeare
- Chapter 12 Johnson’s Lives of the Poets: A Guided Tour
- Chapter 13 Johnson as Biographer
- Chapter 14 Johnson and Travel
- Chapter 15 Johnson and Disability
- Chapter 16 Representing Johnson in Life and After
- Chapter 17 Johnson among the Scholars
- Further Reading
- Index
- Cambridge Companions To …
Chapter 1 - Johnson, Ethics, and Living
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2022
- The New Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson
- The New Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Short Titles and Note on the Text and Cover Art
- Introduction: Contemporary Johnson
- Chapter 1 Johnson, Ethics, and Living
- Chapter 2 Johnson and the Essay
- Chapter 3 Johnson and Renaissance Humanism
- Chapter 4 Johnson and Language
- Chapter 5 Johnson and British Historiography
- Chapter 6 Johnson and Fiction
- Chapter 7 Johnson and Gender
- Chapter 8 Johnson, Race, and Slavery
- Chapter 9 Johnson’s Politics
- Chapter 10 Johnson’s Poetry
- Chapter 11 Johnson’s Editions of Shakespeare
- Chapter 12 Johnson’s Lives of the Poets: A Guided Tour
- Chapter 13 Johnson as Biographer
- Chapter 14 Johnson and Travel
- Chapter 15 Johnson and Disability
- Chapter 16 Representing Johnson in Life and After
- Chapter 17 Johnson among the Scholars
- Further Reading
- Index
- Cambridge Companions To …
Summary
This chapter addresses the question of Johnson’s ethical thought and argues that it is in and through his balanced, subtle, and refined writings that we most see it in play. The piece summons Johnson’s own definition of ethics in his Preface to the Preceptor, an educational work written for the publisher Robert Dodsley (1748), and finds in the work of three thinkers – Isaac Watts, William Law, and Cicero – strong influential strands of thought that offered him both Christian and classical models for how humans should behave toward their fellow-beings. Johnson put in play questions of ethical behavior in his periodical writings, allowing him to present complex moral dilemmas from the multiple angles needed to encompass them. The chapter, taking up a hint from John Sitter, summons an ethical Johnson who might help us face twenty-first century problems with grace and inclusivity.
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- The New Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson , pp. 14 - 26Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022