Books > Language & Literature > Literature: history & criticism > Literary studies > 16th to 18th centuries
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Before Imagination - Embodied Thought from Montaigne to Rousseau (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R1,722
Discovery Miles 17 220
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Before Imagination - Embodied Thought from Montaigne to Rousseau (Hardcover, New)
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Before imagination became the transcendent and creative faculty
promoted by the Romantics, it was for something quite different.
Not reserved to a privileged few, imagination was instead
considered a universal ability that each person could direct in
practical ways. To imagine something meant to form in the mind a
replica of a thing--its taste, its sound, and other physical
attributes. At the end of the Renaissance, there was a movement to
encourage individuals to develop their ability to imagine vividly.
Within their private mental space, a space of embodied, sensual
thought, they could meditate, pray, or philosophize. Gradually,
confidence in the self-directed imagination fell out of favor and
was replaced by the belief that the few--an elite of writers and
teachers--should control the imagination of the many.
This book seeks to understand what imagination meant in early
modern Europe, particularly in early modern France, before the
Romantic era gave the term its modern meaning. The author explores
the themes surrounding early modern notions of imagination
(including hostility to imagination) through the writings of such
figures as Descartes, Montaigne, Francois de Sales, Pascal, the
Marquise de Sevigne, Madame de Lafayette, and Fenelon.
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