Bültmann & Gerriets
Spectacular Science, Technology and Superstition in the Age of Shakespeare
von Sophie Chiari, Mickaël Popelard
Verlag: Edinburgh University Press
Gebundene Ausgabe
ISBN: 978-1-4744-2781-4
Erschienen am 04.09.2017
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 243 mm [H] x 166 mm [B] x 25 mm [T]
Gewicht: 576 Gramm
Umfang: 288 Seiten

Preis: 135,50 €
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Inhaltsverzeichnis

'This well-conceived and richly informative collection situates Shakespearean drama at the intersection of the arts and sciences in early modern Culture. Historians of both the arts and sciences will find this a valuable and provocative volume.'
Stephen Orgel, Professor of English at Stanford University
Explores the interaction between science, literature and spectacle in Shakespeare's era
To the readers who ask themselves 'What is science?', this volume provides an answer from an early modern perspective, whereby science included such various intellectual pursuits as history, poetry, occultism and philosophy. By exploring particular aspects of Shakespearean drama, this collection illustrates how literature and science were inextricably linked in the early modern period. In order to bridge the gap between Renaissance literature and early modern science, the essays collected here focus on a complex intellectual territory situated at the point of juncture between humanism, natural magic and craftsmanship. It is argued that science and literature constantly interacted, thus revealing that what we now call 'literature' and what we choose to describe as 'science' were not clear-cut categories in Shakespeare's days but rather a part of common intellectual territory.
Sophie Chiari is Professor of Early Modern English Literature at Clermont Auvergne University, France. She has written several books and articles on Shakespeare and his contemporaries. Her most recent publication is As You Like It: Shakespeare's Comedy of Liberty (2016).
Mickaël Popelard is Senior Lecturer in English studies at the University of Caen- Normandie, France. He has written several articles on Shakespeare and Bacon, as well as a book on the figure of the scientist in Shakespeare's The Tempest and Marlowe's Doctor Faustus (Rêves de puissance et ruine de l'âme: la figure du savant chez Shakespeare et Marlowe, 2010).
Cover image: Un Savant dans son cabinet, avec leçon de vanité, Jacob van Spreeuwen, c. 1630 © Musée du Louvre/A. Dequier - M. Bard
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ISBN 978-1-4744-2781-4
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Sophie Chiari is Professor of Early Modern English Literature at Clermont Auvergne University, France. She has written several books and articles on Shakespeare and his contemporaries. Her recent publications include Shakespeare's Anatomy of Wit: Love's Labour's Lost (2014) and As You Like It: Shakespeare's Comedy of Liberty (2016). She also recently edited The Circulation of Knowledge in Early Modern English Literature (2015).

Mickaël Popelard is Senior Lecturer in English studies at the University of Caen- Normandie, France. He has written several articles on Shakespeare and Bacon, as well as a monograph on Francis Bacon (Francis Bacon: l'humaniste, le magicien, l'ingénieur, 2010) and a book on the figure of the scientist in Shakespeare's The Tempest and Marlowe's Doctor Faustus (Rêves de puissance et ruine de l'âme: la figure du savant chez Shakespeare et Marlowe, 2010).



Acknowledgements; Note on Contributors; Textual Note; General Introduction; I. Popular Beliefs; 1. The 'Science' of Astrology in Shakespeare's Sonnets, Romeo and Juliet and King Lear, François Laroque; 2. Staging Devils and Witches: Did Shakespeare Read Reginald Scot's The Discoverie of Witchcraft?, Pierre Kapitaniak; II. Healing and Improving; 3. "Remedies For Life": Curing Hysterica Passio in Shakespeare's Othello, Macbeth and The Winter's Tale, Sélima Lejri; 4. "More, I prithee, more": Melancholy, Musical Appetite and Medical Discourse in Shakespeare's Twelfth Night, Pierre Iselin; 5. Saving Perfection from the Alchemists: Shakespeare's Use of Alchemy, Margaret Jones-Davies; III. Knowledge and (Re)Discoveries; 6. Of Mites and Motes: Shakespearean Readings of Epicurean Science, Jonathan Pollock; 7. Shakespeare's Alhazen: Love's Labour's Lost and the History of Optics, Anne-Valérie Dulac; 8. Shakespeare's Montaigne: Maps and Books in The Tempest., Frank Lestringant; 9. Unlimited Science: the Endless Transformation of Nature in Bacon and Shakespeare, Mickaël Popelard; IV. Mechanical Tropes; 10. "Vat is de clock, Jack?": Shakespeare and the 'Science' of Time, Sophie Chiari; 11. "Wheels have been set in motion": Geocentrism and Relativity in Tom Stoppard's Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, Liliane Campos; Coda; Scepticism and the Spectacular: On Shakespeare in an Age of Science, Carla Mazzio; General Bibliography; Index.


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