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The Atom In Seventeenthcentury Poetry Cassandra Gorman

  • SKU: BELL-34378774
The Atom In Seventeenthcentury Poetry Cassandra Gorman
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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The Atom In Seventeenthcentury Poetry Cassandra Gorman instant download after payment.

Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.49 MB
Author: Cassandra Gorman
ISBN: 9781787447844, 9781800101715, 9781843845935, 1787447847, 1800101716, 1843845938
Language: English
Year: 2021

Product desciption

The Atom In Seventeenthcentury Poetry Cassandra Gorman by Cassandra Gorman 9781787447844, 9781800101715, 9781843845935, 1787447847, 1800101716, 1843845938 instant download after payment.

The early modern "atom" - understood as an indivisible particle of matter - captured the poetic imagination in ways that extended far beyond the reception of Lucretius and Epicurean atomism. Contrarily to fears of atomisation and materialist threat, many poets and philosophers of the period sought positive, spiritual motivation in the concept of material indivisibility. This book traces the metaphysical import of these poetic atoms, teasing out an affinity between poetic and atomic forms in seventeenth-century texts. In the writings of Henry More, Thomas Traherne, Margaret Cavendish, Hester Pulter and Lucy Hutchinson, both atoms and poems were instrumental in acts of creating, ordering and reconstructing knowledge. Their poems emerge as exquisitely self-conscious atomic forms, producing intimate reflections on the creative power and indivisibility of self, soul and God. The book begins with a survey of the imaginative possibilities surrounding the early modern "atom", before considering the indivisible centres of the Cambridge Platonist Henry More's cosmic, Spenserian poetics. The focus then turns to the lyrical bond formed between atom and soul in the writings of Thomas Traherne, and from there, to the experimental sequences of Margaret Cavendish and Hester Pulter, whose poetic spaces create new worlds and imagine alternative lives. The book concludes with a study of Lucy Hutchinson's creation poem Order and Disorder, which anticipates the regeneration of fallen being in atomic and alchemical terms.

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