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Passions and Subjectivity in Early Modern Culture (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,743
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Passions and Subjectivity in Early Modern Culture (Paperback)
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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.
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