Literature, Science and Religion in Constantijn Huygens' Ooghentroost
by
Lise Gosseye
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
ISBN-10
1409456064
ISBN-13
9781409456063
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint
Ashgate Publishing Limited
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Dec 30th, 2024
Print length
200 Pages
Weight
453 grams
Product Classification:
Literary studies: c 1500 to c 1800Literary studies: poetry & poets
Ksh 21,600.00
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Using a canonical work of Dutch literature, Ooghentroost (Consolation for the eyes), as a focal point, this books examine the development of literature as a specific discursive domain during the early modern period. Through her analysis of the work, author Lise Gosseye traces how literature begins to be set apart from the scientific and religious domains in early modern discourse and how this development marks the rise of modernity.
Using a canonical work of Dutch literature, Ooghentroost (Consolation for the eyes), as a focal point, this book examines the development of literature as a specific discursive domain during the early modern period. It traces how literature begins to be set apart from the scientific and religious domains in early modern discourse and how this development marks the rise of modernity. Published in 1647 by the Dutch diplomat and poet Constantijn Huygens, Ooghentroost was written at a complex historical moment. The times were marked on the one hand by new developments in science such as the perfection of telescopes and new insights into the nature of light and vision; and on the other by new religious uncertainties and intellectual turmoil, caused by the emphasis of the Reformation on divine election, predestination and individual interpretation of the Bible. Author Lise Gosseye explores how this turbulent historical moment is reflected throughout the poem in a number of frictions that arise within and between various types of language, most notably religious-philosophical discourse, scientific-epistemological discourse and poetic discourse. She traces these tensions through the poem, structuring her analysis primarily around three discursive frictions: the friction between Calvinism and humanism in Ooghentroost; the tension that arises between what could be called a form of Augustinianism and of Stoicism; and finally the tension between the humanist reliance on reading books and the New Scientist’s reliance on observation.
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