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Fools and clowns were widely popular characters employed in early
modern drama, prose texts and poems mainly as laughter makers, or
also as ludicrous metaphorical embodiments of human failures.
Literature and Intellectual Disability in Early Modern England:
Folly, Law and Medicine, 1500-1640 pays full attention to the
intellectual difference of fools, rather than just their
performativity: what does their total, partial, or even pretended
'irrationality' entail in terms of non-standard psychology or
behaviour, and others' perception of them? Is it possible to offer
a close contextualised examination of the meaning of folly in
literature as a disability? And how did real people having
intellectual disabilities in the Renaissance period influence the
representation and subjectivity of literary fools? Alice Equestri
answers these and other questions by investigating the wide range
of significant connections between the characters and Renaissance
legal and medical knowledge as presented in legal records,
dictionaries, handbooks, and texts of medicine, natural philosophy,
and physiognomy. Furthermore, by bringing early modern folly in
closer dialogue with the burgeoning fields of disability studies
and disability theory, this study considers multiple sides of the
argument in the historical disability experience: intellectual
disability as a variation in the person and as a difference which
both society and the individual construct or respond to. Early
modern literary fools' characterisation then emerges as stemming
from either a realistic or also from a symbolical or rhetorical
representation of intellectual disability.
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