
Geographies Of Embodiment In Early Modern England Gathers Essays From Prominent Scholars Of English Renaissance Literature And History Who Have Made Substantial Contributions To The Study Of Early Modern Embodiment, Historical Phenomenology, Affect, Cognition, Memory, And Natural Philosophy. It Provides New Interpretations Of The Geographic Dimensions Of Early Modern Embodiment, Emphasizing The Transactional And Dynamic Aspects Of The Relationship Between Body And World. The Geographies Of Embodiment Encompass Both Cognitive Processes And Cosmic Environments, And Inner Emotional States As Well As Affective Landscapes. Rather Than Always Being Territorialized Onto Individual Bodies, Ideas About Early Modern Embodiment Are Varied Both In Their Scope And In Terms Of Their Representation. Reflecting This Variety, This Volume Offers Up A Range Of Inquiries Into How Early Modern Writers Accounted For The Exchanges Between The Microcosm And Macrocosm. It Engages With Gail Kern Paster's Groundbreaking Scholarship On Embodiment, Humoralism, The Passions, And Historical Phenomenology Throughout, And Offers New Readings Of Edmund Spenser, William Shakespeare, Thomas Nashe, John Milton, And Others. Contributions Consider The Epistemiologies Of Navigation And Cartography, The Significance Of Geohumoralism, The Ethics Of Self-mastery, Theories Of Early Modern Cosmology, The Construction Of Place Memory, And Perceptions Of An Animate Spirit World.
This collection investigates how early modern English writers conceptualized the dynamic, transactional relationship between the human body and its surrounding geographic and cosmic environments. The editors, Garrett A. Sullivan and Mary Floyd-Wilson, curate essays from prominent scholars to examine the intersection of historical phenomenology, cognition, and natural philosophy. By analyzing the exchanges between the microcosm and macrocosm, the contributors argue that embodiment in the period was not restricted to the individual physical form but was instead deeply integrated with affective landscapes and spatial perceptions.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars recognize this volume as a significant contribution to the study of early modern subjectivity and its spatial dimensions. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a specialized resource for researchers in Renaissance literature and history.
Page Count:
288
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192594273
ISBN-13:
9780192594273
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