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Nation and Nurture in Seventeenth-Century English Literature
connects changing seventeenth-century English views of maternal
nurture to the rise of the modern nation, especially between 1603
and 1675. Maternal nurture gains new prominence in the early modern
cultural imagination at the precise moment when England undergoes a
major paradigm shift - from the traditional, dynastic body politic,
organized by organic bonds, to the post-dynastic, modern nation,
comprised of symbolic and affective relations. The book also
demonstrates that shifting early modern perspectives on
Judeo-Christian relations deeply inform the period's interlocking
reassessments of maternal nurture and the nation, especially in the
case of Milton. The book's five chapters analyze a wide range of
reformed and traditional texts, including A pitiless Mother,
William Gouge's Of Domesticall Duties, Shakespeare's Macbeth,
Charles I's Eikon Basilike, and Milton's Paradise Lost, and Samson
Agonistes. Equal attention is paid to such early modern visual
images as The power of women (a late sixteenth-century Dutch
engraving), William Marshall's engraved frontispiece to Richard
Braithwaite's The English Gentleman and Gentlewoman (1641), and
Peter Paul Rubens's painting of Pero and Cimon or Roman Charity
(1630). The book argues that competing early modern figurations of
the nurturing mother mediate in politically implicated ways between
customary biblical models of English kingship and innovative
Hebraic/Puritan paradigms of Englishness.
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