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In Our Time: Culture

Tristram Shandy

In Our Time: Culture

BBC

History

4.6978 Ratings

🗓️ 24 April 2014

⏱️ 48 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss Laurence Sterne's novel Tristram Shandy. Sterne's comic masterpiece is an extravagantly inventive work which was hugely popular when first published in 1759. Its often bawdy humour, and numerous digressions, are combined with bold literary experiment, such as a page printed entirely black to mark the death of one of the novel's characters. Dr Johnson wrote that "Nothing odd will do long. Tristram Shandy did not last" - but two hundred and fifty years after the book's publication, Tristram Shandy remains one of the most influential and widely admired books of the eighteenth century.

With:

Judith Hawley Professor of Eighteenth-Century Literature at Royal Holloway, University of London

John Mullan Professor of English at University College London

Mary Newbould Bowman Supervisor in English at Wolfson College, University of Cambridge.

Producer: Thomas Morris.

Transcript

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0:00.0

You don't need us to tell you there's a general election coming.

0:04.6

So what does it mean for you?

0:06.4

Every day on newscast we dissect the big talking points,

0:10.1

the ones that you want to know more about.

0:12.3

With our book of contacts, we talk directly to the people you want to hear from.

0:16.8

And with help from some of the best BBC journalists,

0:19.4

we'll untangle the stories that matter to you.

0:23.0

Join me, Laura Kunsberg, Adam Fleming, Chris Mason and Patty O'Connell for our daily

0:28.3

podcast.

0:29.3

Newscast, listen on BBC Sounds. Thank you for downloading this episode of In Our Time.

0:35.0

For more details about in our time and for our terms of use please go to BBC.co.

0:40.0

UK slash radio4.

0:42.0

I hope you enjoy the program.

0:44.0

Hello in 1760 a London periodical called The Monthly Review

0:49.0

published a review of two books by an Anglican clergyman, the first

0:52.0

a modest volume of sermons, was described as

0:54.8

causing the greatest outrage against sense and decency that's been offered since the first

0:59.2

establishment of Christianity. The second, a novel, was said to be not only scandalously indecent but absolutely

1:05.6

dull.

1:06.6

We advised the author to remain in way he is in his swaddling clothes without insulting the public

1:11.4

any further.

1:12.4

So insults were the public that they bought the novel in their droves.

...

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