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Writing Early Modern Loneliness: Early Modern Literature in History

Editat de Hannah Yip, Thomas Clifton
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 oct 2024
This interdisciplinary collection of ten essays is the first to redefine historical conceptions of “loneliness” in the Western world by exploring its manifestation in early modern textual sources. Contrary to current scholarly consensus that loneliness in Britain was understood as an emotion from the late eighteenth century, only beginning to emerge in its literary form in the writings of the Romantic poets, the contributors in this volume argue that early modern people were capable of complex and conflicting feelings of social and emotional isolation which were expressed in a wide range of writings. Moreover, these products of loneliness continue to resonate poignantly with humanity today.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783031550515
ISBN-10: 303155051X
Pagini: 336
Ilustrații: Approx. 335 p. 10 illus. in color.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Ediția:2024
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Seria Early Modern Literature in History

Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland

Cuprins

Chapter 1 Introduction: Is “Early Modern Loneliness” an Anachronism? .- Chapter 2 Anxia Bellerophontis: Bellerophon and Loneliness from Homer to Early Modernity.- Chapter 3 “But she to be a Quene, and creuely handeled as was never sene”: Perspectives on Anne Boleyn’s Loneliness in the Tower of London.- Chapter 4 “A thowsond mylys a sonder”: Catholic Exiles from Tudor England and the Ambiguities of Loneliness.- Chapter 5 “Bear Humanly the Human Lot”: Jan Kochanowski and Seeking Catharsis Alone in Early Modern Poland.- Chapter 6 “It is not good that the man should be alone”: Marriage, Loneliness, and the Clergy in Early Modern England.- Chapter 7 The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Believer: Isolation in Seventeenth-Century Religious Poetry in English.- Chapter 8 A “Lasting Moniment” to Loneliness: Involuntary Retirement and Survival through the Psalm Translations of Sir Thomas Fairfax.- Chapter 9 “Another time, in a Lowering and sad Evening, being alone in the field”: Revising Loneliness in the Meditative Writing of ThomasTraherne and Elizabeth Delaval.- Chapter 10 William Penn’s Some Fruits of Solitude: Public Disgrace and Private Consolation.-Chapter 11 The Loneliness of Shakespeare’s Sonnets, Past and Present.-12 Afterword.

Notă biografică

Hannah Yip is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at the University of Manchester, UK. Her current research interests centre on the cultural and emotional lives of clergymen in the English Reformation. She has held Fellowships at the Huntington Library, the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library, and the John Rylands Library, and her work has been published in the Journal of Ecclesiastical History and Reformation
Thomas Clifton PhD MA PGCE (PCET) is a Lecturer in Academic Writing at the Centre for Academic Writing, Coventry University, UK. Thomas completed an AHRC-funded PhD on “Textual Practices in Meditative Writing, 1661–1678” at the University of Birmingham and an MA in early modern literature at Bangor University. Thomas’s research interests include dialogical thought processes in meditative, reflective, and self-writing, historically and contemporarily, and the fluidity of genre in the early modern period.

Textul de pe ultima copertă

Through a wide-ranging and methodologically astute investigation of early modern expressions of loneliness and solitude, this volume makes a valuable contribution to the History of Emotions by providing a useful corrective to the view of the early modern world as communal and where the existence of God and the consequent comfort that knowledge provides are taken as given. 
Cathy Shrank, University of Sheffield, UK
This interdisciplinary collection of ten essays is the first to redefine historical conceptions of “loneliness” in the Western world by exploring its manifestation in early modern textual sources. Contrary to current scholarly consensus that loneliness in Britain was understood as an emotion from the late eighteenth century, only beginning to emerge in its literary form in the writings of the Romantic poets, the contributors in this volume argue that early modern people were capable of complex and conflicting feelings of social and emotional isolation which were expressed in a wide range of writings. Moreover, these products of loneliness continue to resonate poignantly with humanity today.
Hannah Yip is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at the University of Manchester, UK. Her current research interests centre on the cultural and emotional lives of clergymen in the English Reformation. She has held Fellowships at the Huntington Library, the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library, and the John Rylands Library, and her work has been published in the Journal of Ecclesiastical History and Reformation
Thomas Clifton PhD MA PGCE (PCET) is a Lecturer in Academic Writing at the Centre for Academic Writing, Coventry University, UK. Thomas completed an AHRC-funded PhD on “Textual Practices in Meditative Writing, 1661–1678” at the University of Birmingham and an MA in early modern literature at Bangor University. Thomas’s research interests include dialogical thought processes in meditative, reflective, and self-writing, historically and contemporarily, and the fluidity of genre in the early modern period. 

Caracteristici

The first extended study of loneliness in the early modern era Challenges existing theories of the development of this emotion as we understand it today Examines previously unpublished sermons, manuscripts, journals and correspondence