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Miton and Early Modern Devotional Culture analyses the
representation of public and private prayer in John Milton's poetry
and prose, paying particular attention to the ways
seventeenth-century prayer is imagined as embodied in sounds,
gestures, postures, and emotional responses. Naya Tsentourou
demonstrates Milton's profound engagement with prayer, and how this
is driven by a consistent and ardent effort to experience one's
address to God as inclusive of body and spirit and as loaded with
affective potential. The book aims to become the first
interdisciplinary study to show how Milton participates in and
challenges early modern debates about authentic and insincere
worship in public, set and spontaneous prayers in private, and
gesture and voice in devotion.
Miton and Early Modern Devotional Culture analyses the
representation of public and private prayer in John Milton's poetry
and prose, paying particular attention to the ways
seventeenth-century prayer is imagined as embodied in sounds,
gestures, postures, and emotional responses. Naya Tsentourou
demonstrates Milton's profound engagement with prayer, and how this
is driven by a consistent and ardent effort to experience one's
address to God as inclusive of body and spirit and as loaded with
affective potential. The book aims to become the first
interdisciplinary study to show how Milton participates in and
challenges early modern debates about authentic and insincere
worship in public, set and spontaneous prayers in private, and
gesture and voice in devotion.
This open access book presents five different approaches to reading
breath in literature, in response to texts from a range of
historical, geographical and cultural environments. Breath, for all
its ubiquity in literary texts, has received little attention as a
transhistorical literary device. Drawing together scholars of
Medieval Romance, Early Modern Drama, Fin de Siecle Aesthetics,
American Poetics and the Postcolonial Novel, this book offers the
first transhistorical study of breath in literature. At the same
time, it shows how the study of breath in literature can contribute
to recent developments in the Medical Humanities.
This collection examines the widespread phenomenon of hypocrisy in
literary, theological, political, and social circles in England
during the years after the Reformation and up to the Restoration.
Bringing together current critical work on early modern
subjectivity, performance, print history, and private and public
identities and space, the collection provides readers with a way
into the complexity of the term, by offering an overview of
different forms of hypocrisy, including educational practice,
social transaction, dramatic technique, distorted worship, female
deceit, print controversy, and the performance of demonic
possession. Together these approaches present an interdisciplinary
examination of a term whose meanings have always been assumed, yet
never fully outlined, despite the proliferation of publications on
aspects of hypocrisy such as self-fashioning and disguise.
Questions the chapters collectively pose include: how did
hypocritical discourse conceal concerns relating to social status,
gender roles, religious doctrine, and print culture? How was
hypocrisy manifest materially? How did different literary genres
engage with hypocrisy?
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