Cover image for Passions and Subjectivity in Early Modern Culture.
Passions and Subjectivity in Early Modern Culture.
Title:
Passions and Subjectivity in Early Modern Culture.
Author:
Sierhuis, Freya.
ISBN:
9781472413659
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (328 pages)
Contents:
Cover -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgements -- Notes on Contributors -- Introduction -- Part I Intersubjectivity, Ethics, Agency -- 1 Passion and Intersubjectivity in Early Modern Literature -- 2 Affective Physics: Affectus in Spinoza's Ethica -- 3 Donne's Passions: Emotion, Agency and Language -- Part II Embodiment, Cognition, Identity -- 4 Melancholy, Passions and Identity in the Renaissance -- 5 Montaigne's Soul -- 6 Uncertain Knowing, Blind Vision and Active Passivity: Subjectivity, Sensuality and Emotion in Milton's Epistemology -- Part III Politics, Affects, Friendship -- 7 Friendship and Freedom of Speech in the Work of Fulke Greville -- 8 A Passion for the Past: The Politics of Nostalgia on the Early Jacobean Stage -- 9 'Not Truth but Image Maketh Passion': Hobbes on Instigation and Appeasing -- Part IV Religion, Devotion, Theology -- 10 'A Sensible Touching, Feeling and Groping': Metaphor and Sensory Experience in the English Reformation -- 11 'Tears of Passion' and 'Inordinate Lamentation': Complicated Grief in Donne and Augustine -- 12 Passions, Politics and Subjectivity in Philip Massinger's The Emperor of the East -- Part V Philosophy and the Early Modern Passions -- 13 The Fallacy of 'that within': Hamlet Meets Wittgenstein -- 14 'The Greatest Share of Endless Pain': The Spectral Sacramentality of Pain in Milton's Paradise Lost -- 15 'Not Passion's Slave': Hamlet, Descartes and the Passions -- Afterword -- Bibliography -- Index.
Abstract:
Bringing together scholars from literature and the history of ideas, Passions and Subjectivity in Early Modern Culture explores new ways of negotiating the boundaries between cognitive and bodily models of emotion, and between different versions of the will as active or passive. In the process, it juxtaposes the historical formation of such ideas with contemporary philosophical debates. It frames a dialogue between rhetoric and medicine, politics and religion, in order to examine the relationship between mind and body and between experience and the senses. Some chapters discuss literature, in studies of Shakespeare, Donne, and Milton; other essays concentrate on philosophical arguments, both Aristotelian and Galenic models from antiquity, and new mechanistic formations in Descartes, Hobbes and Spinoza. A powerful sense of paradox emerges in treatments of the passions in the early modern period, also reflected in new literary and philosophical forms in which inwardness was displayed, analysed and studied-the autobiography, the essay, the soliloquy-genres which rewrite the formation of subjectivity. At the same time, the frame of reference moves outwards, from the world of interior states to encounter the passions on a public stage, thus reconnecting literary study with the history of political thought. In between the abstract theory of political ideas and the inward selves of literary history, lies a field of intersections waiting to be explored. The passions, like human nature itself, are infinitely variable, and provoke both literary experimentation and philosophical imagination. Passions and Subjectivity in Early Modern Culture thus makes new connections between embodiment, selfhood and the emotions in order to suggest both new models of the self and new models for interdisciplinary history.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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