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Dennis Todd has written 4 work(s)
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Cover for 9781107422476 Cover for 9781488526138 Cover for 9780874137590 Cover for 9780226805559 Cover for 9780226805566
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Product Description: The Americas appear as an evocative setting in more than half of Daniel Defoe's novels, and often offer a new beginning for his characters. In the first full-length study of Defoe and colonialism, Dennis Todd explores why the New World loomed so large in Defoe's imagination...read more

Paperback:

9781107422476 | Cambridge Univ Pr, July 10, 2014, cover price $44.99 | About this edition: The Americas appear as an evocative setting in more than half of Daniel Defoe's novels, and often offer a new beginning for his characters.

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Product Description: There has never been a information technology Guide like this. information technology 433 Success Secrets is not about the ins and outs of information technology. Instead, it answers the top 433 questions that we are asked and those we come across in our forums, consultancy and education programs...read more

Paperback:

9781488526138 | Lightning Source Inc, July 31, 2013, cover price $34.48 | About this edition: There has never been a information technology Guide like this.

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In 1726, an illiterate woman from Surrey named Mary Toft announced that she had given birth to seventeen rabbits. Deceiving respected physicians and citizens alike, she created a hoax that held England spellbound for months. In Imagining Monsters, Dennis Todd tells the story of this bizarre incident and shows how it illuminates eighteenth-century beliefs about the power of imagination and the problems of personal identity.Mary Toft's outrageous claim was accepted because of a common belief that the imagination of a pregnant woman could deform her fetus, creating a monster within her. Drawing on largely unexamined material from medicine, embryology, philosophy, and popular "monster" exhibitions, Todd shows that such ideas about monstrous births expressed a fear central to scientific, literary, and philosophical thinking: that the imagination could transgress the barrier between mind and body.In his analysis of the Toft case, Todd exposes deep anxieties about the threat this transgressive imagination posed to the idea of the self as stable, coherent, and autonomous. Major works of Pope and Swift reveal that they, too, were concerned with these issues, and Imagining Monsters provides detailed discussions of Gulliver's Travels and The Dunciad illustrating how these writers used images of monstrosity to explore the problematic nature of human identity. It also includes a provocative analysis of Pope's later work that takes into account his physical deformity and his need to defend himself in a society that linked a deformed body with a deformed character.

Hardcover:

9780226805559 | Univ of Chicago Pr, November 1, 1995, cover price $92.00

Paperback:

9780226805566 | Univ of Chicago Pr, November 1, 1995, cover price $34.00 | About this edition: In 1726, an illiterate woman from Surrey named Mary Toft announced that she had given birth to seventeen rabbits.

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