Tropes and the Literary-Scientific Revolution
eBook - ePub

Tropes and the Literary-Scientific Revolution

Forms of Proof

  1. 228 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Tropes and the Literary-Scientific Revolution

Forms of Proof

About this book

Tropes and the Literary-Scientific Revolution: Forms of Proof argues that the rise of mechanical science in the seventeenth century had a profound impact on both language and literature. To the extent that new ideas about things were accompanied by new attitudes toward words, what we commonly regard as the "scientific revolution" inevitably bore literary dimensions as well. Literary tropes and forms underwent tremendous reassessment in the seventeenth century, and early modern science was shaped just as powerfully by contest over the place of literary figures, from personification and metaphor to anamorphosis and allegory. In their rejection of teleological explanations of natural motion, for instance, early modern philosophers often disputed the value of personification, a figural projection of interiority onto what was becoming increasingly a mechanical world. And allegory—a dominant mode of literature from the late Middle Ages until well into the Renaissance—became "the vice of those times," as Thomas Rymer described it in 1674. This book shows that its acute devaluation was possible only in conjunction with a distinctively modern physics. Analyzing writings by Sidney, Shakespeare, Bacon, Jonson, Brahe, Kepler, Galileo, Hobbes, Descartes, and more, it asserts that the scientific revolution was a literary phenomenon, just as the literary revolution was also a scientific one.

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Yes, you can access Tropes and the Literary-Scientific Revolution by Michael Slater in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Literary Criticism. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
Routledge
Year
2024
Print ISBN
9781032422718
eBook ISBN
9781040013946

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Half-Title
  3. Series
  4. Title
  5. Copyright
  6. Contents
  7. Acknowledgments
  8. Introduction: A “Literary-Scientific Revolution?”
  9. 1 A New Concept of Motion: Allegory and the “Literary Revolution”
  10. 2 A Poetics of “Transfixion”: Dissecting Allegory in The Faerie Queene
  11. 3 Rethinking “Revolution”: Hamlet’s Astronomical Metaphors
  12. 4 The Ghost in the Machine: “Emotion” and Mind-Body Union from Hamlet to Descartes
  13. 5 Reading the “Book of Nature”: Allegory and Astronomy in Galileo and Kepler
  14. Index