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The Lithic Imagination from More to Milton, Hardback Book

The Lithic Imagination from More to Milton Hardback

Part of the Early Modern Literary Geographies series

Hardback

Description

The Lithic Imagination from More to Milton explores how stones, rocks, and the broader mineral realm played a vital role in early modern England's religious and cultural systems that, in turn, informs the period's poetic and visual imagination.

The twin buttresses of a human lifespan and the gyre-like turns of England's long Reformation provide a broad dome under which to locate the many textual and visual archives this book studies.

These texts and images participate in specifically English histories (literary, artistic, political, religious) although continental influences are frequently in dialogue.

The religious orbit tracks the rivalries firstly between Jewish and Christian culture, touches on Christianity's tension with Islam, but most intently follows the antagonisms of Catholic and variants of Reformed or Protestant belief.

The volume features canonical writers such as Shakespeare, Spenser, Donne, Wroth, Herbert, Milton, and Pulter, but puts them in company with lesser-known religious polemicists, alchemists, anatomists, painters, mothers, and stone masons.

The visual archive attends to biblical illustration, tapestries, church furniture, and paintings, anatomical drawings, as well as statues to form a multi-media archive.

Similarly, the lithic embraces a wide continuum of mineral forms from bodily encrustations like the kidney and bezoar stone, to salt, iron, limestone, marble, flint, and silicon.

The assemblage of materials speaks to aspirational imperial fantasies, looming colonial conquests, syncretism and supersession, as well as issues of gender and the race-making category of hue, alongside elitist ideologies of an elect, chosen people.

All connect via the storied pathways of stone as densely material and a foundation for the abstract imaginary along the scala naturae.

Across these human-stone encounters, stone fascinates and betrays and is equal parts damnation and salvation. This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence.

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