[New Book] The Poesy of Scientia in Early Modern England

Editors: Subha Mukherji (University of Cambridge) & Elizabeth L. Swann (Durham University)

Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan, 2024

This book explores interconnections between the modes of knowing that we now associate with the rubrics ‘literature’ and ‘science’ at a formative point in their early development. Rather than simply tracing lines of influence, it focuses on how both literary texts and natural philosophy engage with materiality, language, affect, and form.

Some essays are invested in how early modern science adopts and actively experiments with rhetorical and poetic modes and expression, while others emphasize a shared investment in natural philosophical topics—alchemy, chance, or astrology for example—that move among the period’s observational texts and its literature, highlighting the participation of literary texts in the production of experimental knowledge.

Organised around the broad themes of creation and transformation, mediation and communication, and interpretation and imaginative speculation, the essays collectively probe the presumed dichotomy between science’s schematizing and taxonomic ambitions, and the fertile and volatile creative energies of literary texts.

Contents

Introduction Poesy and Scientia: Matters of Fancy – Elizabeth L. Swann

‘Walking, Talking Minerals’: Men and Metals in King Lear and Bussy d’Ambois – Helen Smith

The Imperfect Circle: Hester Pulter’s Alchemical Forms – Cassandra Gorman

From Philosopher’s Stone to Phosphorus: Robert Boyle’s Illuminating Experiments – Elizabeth L. Swann

Love Letters to Fortune: Queen Elizabeth’s Lottery of 1567–1569 – Michael Witmore

‘The Sunne and Moone of Knowledge’? Mathematical Astrology in Rollo, Duke of Normandy – Joseph Jarrett

The Plain Style, Plane Chart Navigation and the Paradox of Disinterestedness – Felix Sprang

Commerce, Credit, and Transaction: The Rhetorical Origins of Big Science – Claire Preston

Monsignore Agucchi Reads a Letter: Sunspots, Secrecy, and Scientia in the Early Seventeenth Century – Jonathan Sawday

The Jobean Apophatic and the Symphonic Unknowability of the World – Kevin Killeen

‘Manure thyself’: The Poetics of Fertilisation in Early Modern English Religious Writing – Ayesha Mukherjee

‘Instruments’ of the Body: The Conflicting Corporeal Hermeneutics of Francis Bacon’s Medical Art – Tom Mortimer

‘Pursued Thoughts’: Imagination, Raving and Meditation in the Early Boyle – Sorana Corneanu

Weaving a Web of Light: Final Thoughts about Science’s Poetics – Ofer Gal

Index

Source: https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-031-51800-3