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Mortal Thoughts

Religion, Secularity, & Identity in Shakespeare and Early Modern Culture

By (author) Brian Cummings
Format: Hardback
Publisher: Oxford University Press, Oxford, United Kingdom
Published: 22nd Aug 2013
Dimensions: w 154mm h 223mm d 30mm
Weight: 584g
ISBN-10: 0199677719
ISBN-13: 9780199677719
Barcode No: 9780199677719
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Synopsis
Since the nineteenth century, it has been assumed that the concept of personal identity in the early modern period is bound up with secularization. Indeed, many explanations of the emergence of modernity have been based on this thesis, in which Shakespeare as a secular author has played a central role. However, the idea of secularization is now everywhere under threat. The secularity of modern society is less apparent than it was a generation ago. Shakespeare, too, has come to be seen in a religious perspective. What happens to human identity in this different framework? Mortal Thoughts asks what selfhood looks like if we do not assume that an idea of the self could only come into being as a result of an emptying out of a religious framework. It does so by examining human mortality. What it is to be human, and how a life is framed by its ending, are issues that cross religious confessions in early modernity, and interrogate the sacred and secular divide. A series of chapters examines literature and art in relation to concepts such as conscience, martyrdom, soliloquy, luck, suicide, and embodiment. Religious and philosophical creativity are revealed as poised around anxieties about finitude and contingency, challenging conventional divisions between kinds of literary and artistic endeavour. Mortal Thoughts considers incipient genres of life writing (More, Foxe and Montaigne) and life drawing (Durer, Hans Baldung Grien) in relation to dramatic representation and literary narration (Shakespeare, Donne, Milton). In the process it asks whether the problem of human identity rewrites historical boundaries.

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a compelling bredth of reference, not merely to the early modern artists and writers who lend their names to the chapters...but to the entire range of classical authors on whom they drew. * Gerard Kilroy, The Times Literary Supplement. * The key concern here is human identity, and it is testament to the brilliance and intellectual verve of this book that such an extensively examined topic as early modern subjectivity has been set out in such a compellingly fresh fashion. * Travis Decook, Review of English Studies * Cummings most certainly succeeds in writing great criticism: his most stunning readings immerse us in the intricate workings of a simple gesture like the hand thrust into fire in John Foxe's Acts and Monuments or the naked body emerging from a dark door in Duerer's enigmatic self-portrait. * Julia Reinhard Lupton, Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 *