Conscience in Early Modern English Literature

Conscience in Early Modern English Literature

by Abraham Stoll
Conscience in Early Modern English Literature

Conscience in Early Modern English Literature

by Abraham Stoll

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Overview

Conscience in Early Modern English Literature describes how poetry, theology, and politics intersect in the early modern conscience. In the wake of the Reformation, theologians attempt to understand how the faculty works, poets attempt to capture the experience of being in its grip, and revolutionaries attempt to assert its authority for political action. The result, Abraham Stoll argues, is a dynamic scene of conscience in England, thick with the energies of salvation and subjectivity, and influential in the public sphere of Civil War politics. Stoll explores how Shakespeare, Spenser, Herbert, and Milton stage the inward experience of conscience. He links these poetic scenes to Luther, Calvin, and English Reformation theology. He also demonstrates how they shape the public discourses of conscience in such places as the toleration debates, among Levellers, and in the prose of Hobbes and Milton. In the literature of the early modern conscience, Protestant subjectivity evolves toward the political subject of modern liberalism.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781108311113
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 10/05/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Abraham Stoll is Professor of English at the University of San Diego. He is editing a new edition of Paradise Lost. He is author of Milton and Monotheism (2009) and has edited the five-volume edition of Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene (2006).

Table of Contents

Introduction: thus conscience; 1. Destructuring: Aquinas, Luther, Perkins; 2. Spenser's allegorical conscience; 3. Con-science in Macbeth; 4. Casuistry and antinomianism; 5. Public discourses: toleration, revolution, sovereignty; 6. Milton's expansive conscience; Bibliography; Index.
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