Reviews
"By following 'the literary engagement' with encyclopaedism, [Rudy] offers important accounts of how British literary figures responded to this topic well before the involvement of Gustave Flaubert and Jorge Luis Borges... [A] welcome contribution to the history of encyclopaedism in all its protean forms." -- Richard Yeo, Literature and History
"In a world where the algorithms of Google and the trillions of megabytes of facts and data contained within the pages of Wikipedia can instantaneously supply (or even oversupply) the curious with whatever information they need, it is timely to revisit and investigate the geneses of this phenomenon and the seemingly irresistible, yet vexed desire humanity has displayed over the centuries to collage and systematise knowledge. Seth Rudy traces precisely these origins and their literary manifestations through a detailed and erudite survey of encyclopedic impulses...Rudy thus offers an invaluable, if not foundational contribution to research in this area and his readers will be richly rewarded by the book's considerable originality and perceptiveness." -- Adrian Wallbank, The BARS Review
"Seth Rudy has written a fascinating, challenging, and at times eye-opening book. Based on an impressive number of primary sources, he tells the story of a concept, a practice, and an intellectual process all at once...the concept of completeness doubtlessly offers a new, fresh perspective for understanding the concept of knowledge and encyclopedism in the early-modern period. The book establishes a vantage point that will be of great use and inspiration to researchers from many disciplines, myself included." -- Linn Holmberg, Erudition and the Republic of Letters
Articles/Book Chapters
“‘The Whole Set to View’: Orders of Knowledge in Chambers’ Cyclopaedia.” Ordering
Knowledge: Disciplinarity and the Shaping of European Modernity, Presses Universitaires De Strasbourg, 2023, pp. 91–125.
“Gaming the Golden Age of Piracy.” Digital Defoe: Studies in Defoe & His Contemporaries 7.1 (Fall 2015): 34-65.
“Stories of Everything: Epics, Encyclopedias, and Concepts of ‘Complete’ Knowledge 1667 – 1729.” The Eighteenth Century 55.4 (Winter 2014): 411-30.
"Knowledge and the Systematic Reader: the Past and Present of Encyclopedic Reading." Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research 6.26 (2014): 505-26.
"Pope, Swift, and the Poetics of Posterity." Eighteenth-Century Life 35.3 (Fall 2011): 1-28.
"Stage Presence: Performance and Theatricality in Dickens′s Our Mutual Friend." Dickens Studies Annual 37 (2006): 65-80.