The Matter of Revolution: Science, Poetry, and Politics in the Age of Milton

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Cornell University Press, 1996 - 257 páginas

John Rogers here addresses the literary and ideological consequences of the remarkable, if improbable, alliance between science and politics in seventeenth-century England. He looks at the cultural intersection between the English and Scientific Revolutions, concentrating on a body of work created in a brief but potent burst of intellectual activity during the period of the Civil Wars, the Interregnum, and the earliest years of the Stuart Restoration. Rogers traces the broad implications of a seemingly outlandish cultural phenomenon: the intellectual imperative to forge an ontological connection between physical motion and political action.

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Contenido

Marvell Winstanley and the Natural History of
39
Marvell and the Action of Virginity
70
Chaos Creation and the Political Science
103
The Tragedy of Tartar
130
Milton and the Mysterious Terms of History
144
Margaret Cavendish and the Gendering of
177
The Failure of
212
Bibliography
229
Index
251
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John Rogers is Associate Professor of English at Yale University.

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