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Reading the Early Modern Passions

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How translatable is the language of the emotions across cultures and time? What connotations of particular emotions, strongly felt in the early modern period, have faded or shifted completely in ou...
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  • 01 June 2004
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How translatable is the language of the emotions across cultures and time? What connotations of particular emotions, strongly felt in the early modern period, have faded or shifted completely in our own? If Western culture has traditionally held emotion to be hostile to reason and the production of scientific knowledge, why and how have the passions been lauded as windows to higher truths? Assessing the changing discourses of feeling and their relevance to the cultural history of affect, Reading the Early Modern Passions offers fourteen interdisciplinary essays on the meanings and representations of the emotional universe of Renaissance Europe in literature, music, and art.

Many in the early modern era were preoccupied by the relation of passion to action and believed the passions to be a natural force requiring stringent mental and physical disciplines. In speaking to the question of the historicity and variability of emotions within individuals, several of these essays investigate specific emotions, such as sadness, courage, and fear. Other essays turn to emotions spread throughout society by contemporary events, such as a ruler's death, the outbreak of war, or religious schism, and discuss how such emotions have widespread consequences in both social practice and theory.

Addressing anxieties about the power of emotions; their relation to the public good; their centrality in promoting or disturbing an individual's relation to God, to monarch, and to fellow human beings, the authors also look at the ways emotion serves as a marker or determinant of gender, ethnicity, and humanity. Contributors to the volume include Zirka Filipczak, Victoria Kahn, Michael Schoenfeldt, Bruce Smith, Richard Strier, and Gary Tomlinson.

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Price: $34.95
Pages: 392
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Imprint: University of Pennsylvania Press
Publication Date: 01 June 2004
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780812218725
Format: Paperback
BISACs: LITERARY CRITICISM / European / General, Cultural studies
REVIEWS Icon
"Thanks to the collection as a whole, the complex history of the passions in the early modern mind and body will now take a more prominent place in our study of the literature, art, and music of the period."
Gail Kern Paster is Director of the Folger Shakespeare Library and the author of The Body Embarrassed: Drama and the Disciplines of Shame in Early Modern England. Katherine Rowe is Associate Professor of English at Bryn Mawr College. She is the author of Dead Hands: Fictions of Agency, Renaissance to Modern. Mary Floyd-Wilson teaches English literature at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and is the author of English Ethnicity and Race in Early Modern Drama.

Introduction: Reading the Early Modern Passions

PART I. EARLY MODERN EMOTION SCRIPTS
1. Against the Rule of Reason: Praise of Passion from Petrarch to Luther to Shakespeare to Herbert — Richard Strier
2. "Commotion Strange": Passion in Paradise Lost — Michael Schoenfeldt
3. Poses and Passions: Mona Lisa's "Closely Folded" Hands — Zirka Z. Filipczak
4. Compassion in the Public Sphere of Milton and King Charles — John Staines

PART II. HISTORICAL PHENOMENOLOGY
5. Melancholy Cats, Lugged Bears, and Early Modern Cosmology: Reading Shakespeare's Psychological Materialism Across the Species Barrier — Gail Kern Paster
6. English Mettle — Mary Floyd-Wilson
7. Hearing Green — Bruce Smith
8. Humoral Knowledge and Liberal Cognition in Davenant's Macbeth — Katherine Rowe
9. Five Pictures of Pathos — Gary Tomlinson

PART III. DISCIPLINARY BOUNDARIES
10. The Passions and the Interests in Early Modern Europe: The Case of Guarini's Il Pastor fido — Victoria Kahn
11. Sadness in The Faerie Queene — Douglas Trevor
12. "Par Accident": The Public Work of Early Modern Theater — Jane Tylus
13. Strange Alteration: Physiology and Psychology from Galen to Rabelais — Timothy Hampton

Notes
List of Contributors
Index
Acknowledgments