Early modern writing and the privatisation of experience

Author(s)

    • Davis, Nick (Nicholas Mark)

Bibliographic Information

Early modern writing and the privatisation of experience

Nick Davis

(Literary studies)

Bloomsbury, 2013

  • : HB

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [221]-232) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Reading a wide range of early modern authors and exploring their cultural-historical, philosophical and scientific contexts, Early Modern Writing and the Privatization of Experience examines the shift in focus from reliance on shared experience to placing of trust in individualized experience which occurs in the writing and culture of the period. Nick Davis contends that much of the era's literary production participates significantly in this broad cultural movement. Covering key writers of the period including Shakespeare, Donne, Chaucer, Spenser, Langland, Hobbes and Bunyan, Davis begins with an overview of the medieval-early modern privatizing cultural transition. He then goes on to offer an analysis of King Lear, Richard II, Henry IV Part 1, The Winter's Tale, and the first three books of The Fairie Queene, among other texts, considering their treatment of the relation between individual life and the life attributed to the cosmos, the idea of symbolic narrative positing a collective human subject, and the forming of pragmatic relations between individual and group.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements Introduction: Instruments of Change 1. The Private and the Communal - Degrees of Separation Part A Introduction: Cosmomorphic Fracture: 'For every man alone thinks that he hath got / To be a Phoenix' 2. 'That Dark Sun': Donne and Melancholic Individuality 3. King Lear and the Death of the World Part B Introduction: Collective Representations, Symbolic Narratives 4 Readerly Isolation and Subjective Freedom in The Faerie Queene 5 Hobbes and Bunyan: The Subsuming Individual Vision Part C Introduction: Refiguring Community, Thinking through Festivity 6 Taking Sights in Richard II - 1 Henry IV 7 A Reconstitution of Community: 'Nature's' Dismantling and Replacement in The Winter's Tale Notes Bibliography Index

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