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Balloon Madness - Flights of Imagination in Britain, 1783-1786
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Table of Contents

Beginnings
Madness and Balloons
One Man's Balloon Madness
People and Places
Crowds, Criminals and Charlatans
Fashion
Satires
Literature
Monarchs
Gods and Heroes
The Sublime
Aeronationalism
War
Back to Earth: Parachutes and Balloons, 1785 and 1802
Ascending Again: Balloons in Flights of Imagination
Bibliography
Index

Reviews

Full of lively personalities and striking anecdotes drawn from Brant's thorough archival research, this book is a fascinating and comprehensive account.
*LSE REVIEW OF BOOKS*

Brant's references to literary works will delight students of literature.
*ROMANTIK: JOURNAL FOR THE STUDY OF ROMANTICISMS*

An excellent book that will enrich the work of anyone working on the period.
*BRITISH SOCIETY FOR LITERATURE & SCIENCE*

Full of lively personalities and striking anecdotes.this book is a fascinating and comprehensive account.
*ISRAEL BOOK REVIEW*

Provides a rich, literary analysis of ballooning in Britain.
*AEROSPACE*

Brant's investigation goes far beyond the classic balloon literature....A wealth of sources is deployed with a light touch.
*TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT*

This is a book rich in detail, and the mania for balloons that gripped the nation from 1783 to 1786 is securely tethered to the social, cultural, and political context. But context is not everything: following Rita Felski, Brant looks for the lines of affect and affection in understanding how we connect with the texts and objects of the past. This is not simply a survey of the phenomenon of the balloon but, as Brant brings to the fore in her final chapter, a meditation upon what balloons continue to mean for us in the present.
*Journal of British Studies*

This beguiling book is an absolute gem. Written with a lightness of touch that belies the weight and even magnitude of what it has to say, Balloon Madness has all the buoyancy and ludic unpredictability of the object at its centre. That object, is nothing more - or less - than the balloon itself, which emerges here as a comic epic hero of Enlightenment science and technology. Brant isolates three years in the 1780s when this remarkable invention, pioneered by the French and flamboyantly commandeered by an Italian, nonetheless captured the very specifically British imagination. Yet as she charts the balloon's rise and fall in Britain, Brant also delivers a high-spirited micro-history of the Enlightenment itself: the balloon is a device for thinking - and, more important, imagining - that period's boundless paradoxes and possibilities.
*Jayne Lewis, Professor of English, University of California, Irvine and author of Air's Appearance: Literary Atmosphere in British Fiction, 1660-1794*

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