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πŸ“

Time, Narrative, and Emotion in Early Modern England

✍ Scribed by David Houston Wood


Publisher
Ashgate
Year
2009
Tongue
English
Leaves
210
Series
Literary and Scientific Cultures of Early Modernity
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Exploiting a link between early modern concepts of the medical and the literary, David Houston Wood suggests that the recent critical attention to the gendered, classed, and raced elements of the embodied early modern subject has been hampered by its failure to acknowledge the role time and temporality play within the scope of these admittedly crucial concerns. Wood examines the ways that depictions of time expressed in early modern medical texts reveal themselves in contemporary literary works, demonstrating that the early modern recognition of the self as a palpably volatile entity, viewed within the tenets of contemporary medical treatises, facilitated the realistic portrayal of literary characters and served as a structuring principle for narrative experimentation. The study centers on four canonical, early modern texts notorious among scholars for their structural- that is, narrative, or temporal- difficulties. Wood displays the cogency of such analysis by working across a range of generic boundaries: from the prose romance of Philip Sidney's Arcadia, to the staged plays of William Shakespeare's Othello and The Winter's Tale, to John Milton's stubborn reliance upon humoral theory in shaping his brief epic (or closet drama), Samson Agonistes. As well as adding a new dimension to the study of authors and texts that remain central to early modern English literary culture, the author proposes a new method for analyzing the conjunction of character emotion and narrative structure that will serve as a model for future scholarship in the areas of historicist, formalist, and critical temporal studies.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Contents
Acknowledgments
1 β€œDivers paces with divers persons” : Timing the Self in Early Modern England
2 β€œThe accident of an instant” : Passions, Potions, and Poisons in Sidney’s Old Arcadia
3 β€œVery Now” : Time and the Intersubjective in Othello
4 β€œNot a jar o’ th’ clock” : Time and Narrative in The Winter’s Tale
5 β€œSpirit of phrenzie” : Narrative Temporality in Samson Agonistes
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index


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