The Worlds of Renaissance Melancholy: Robert Burton in Context

The Worlds of Renaissance Melancholy

Robert Burton in Context

2006 • 356 pages

Angus Gowland investigates the theory of melancholy and its many applications in the Renaissance by means of a wide-ranging contextual analysis of Robert Burton's encyclopaedic Anatomy of Melancholy (first published in 1621). Approaching the Anatomy as the culmination of early modern medical, philosophical and spiritual inquiry about melancholy, Gowland examines the ways in which Burton exploited the moral psychology central to the Renaissance understanding of the condition to construct a critical vision of his intellectual and political environment. In the first sustained analysis of the evolving relationship of the Anatomy (in the various versions issued between 1621 and 1651) to late Renaissance humanist learning and early seventeenth-century England and Europe, Gowland corrects the prevailing view of the work as an unreflective digest of other authors' opinions, and reveals the Anatomy's character as a polemical literary engagement with the live intellectual, religious and political issues of its day.


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Series

21 released books

Ideas in Context

Ideas in Context is a 21-book series with 21 released primary works first released in 1984 with contributions by J.G.A. Pocock, Laurence Dickey, and Peter Novick.


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